Crypto Trading Volumes Plummet Nearly 50% from October 2025 Peak as Market Activity Cools

Global cryptocurrency trading volumes have collapsed by nearly half since their October 2025 peak, plunging to $4.3 trillion as market activity sharply contracts. Despite the severe downturn, Binance maintains its iron grip on the sector, commanding over one-third of all market share while derivatives trading—specifically $3.5 trillion in perpetual futures volume—emerges as the dominant arena for remaining active traders.
Derivatives form the primary engine of liquidity in the market
Market data suggests that derivative traders currently account for the bulk of trading activity in the crypto space. The phenomenon suggests that the market is currently saturated with sophisticated traders, as evidenced by the preference for futures, perpetual swaps, and options contracts.
Meanwhile, CryptoQuant’s data shows that institutions and professional traders have been at the forefront in the derivatives market. The two groups combined accounted for $3.5 trillion of the total derivatives activity volume of $4.3 trillion in 2025.
The $3.5 trillion in perpetual futures, according to the analysis, represents approximately 4X the total spot trading volume recorded on centralized exchanges.
Spot trading on CEX fell to under $1 trillion from $1.4 trillion last month, solidifying the perpetuals market as the key pillar for revenue expansion and price discovery for major exchanges. Perps currently represent over 70% of total CEX activity. Derivatives have typically accounted for 60-70% of total exchange volume during bullish phases in previous market cycles.
However, perpetual futures volume this year has dropped from $3.67 trillion in January to $3.57 trillion in February, according to CryptoQuant.
Spot trading volume also followed a similar trend in 2026, dropping slightly from $1.1 trillion in January to $1.01 trillion in February. Spot trading volume further dropped to $818.45 billion in March.
Binance remains dominant despite market cooldown
Binance has maintained the top spot for total trading volume among CEXs, though other exchanges like MEXC and Bybit continue to narrow the gap. The exchange recorded $248 billion last month, a 5% drop from 37% market share to approximately 32% in March. Meanwhile, its spot trading volume so far this year is nearly $1 trillion.
MEXC exchange now commands 9% of the spot trading volume, representing $77 billion. The exchange’s total spot trading volume so far in 2026 is approximately $263 billion. Bybit also recorded 7%, translating to $59 billion. It has accumulated roughly $206 billion since the start of the year. Other exchanges, like Gate and Crypto.com, recorded $56 billion and $52 billion, respectively.
Similarly, Binance exchange remains dominant in the perpetual futures landscape with a total of $1.4 trillion in March. OKX, Bybit, Bitget, and Coinbase International followed with $0.7 trillion, $0.5 trillion, $0.3 trillion, and $0.2 trillion, respectively.
CryptoQuant’s data further shows that Binance has accumulated over $4.5 trillion in total perpetual futures trading volume so far in 2026. OKX and Bybit have each managed $2.2 trillion and $1.5 trillion, respectively. Binance’s perpetual futures trading volume share remains at 40%, followed by OKX (19%) and Bybit (13%). The data confirms Binance’s dominance across both spot and derivatives trading.
Meanwhile, preliminary data suggests mixed effects, according to CryptoRank. Although spreads have slightly widened for less liquid altcoins, major crypto pairs such as Bitcoin and Ethereum have maintained stable execution quality despite low volumes.
Exchange incentive programs for liquidity providers are now offering more targeted rewards for maintaining tight spreads during lower-volume periods.
On the other hand, the 48% decline in CEX volumes has also raised important questions about market quality and liquidity. However, market-making innovations help explain why the volume plunge has not led to proportionately negative impacts on execution metrics. That is particularly true for institutional-scale orders where transaction cost analysis (TCA) remains crucial.
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