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Crypto Trading Volume Drops 48% — Is the Market Running on Leverage Alone?

The post Crypto Trading Volume Drops 48% — Is the Market Running on Leverage Alone? appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

The crypto market may appear stable on the surface, but underlying activity is cooling rapidly. Data shows that total centralized exchange (CEX) trading volume has dropped to around $4.3 trillion, marking a sharp 48% decline from the October 2025 peak. This slowdown points to weakening participation, even as prices attempt to hold higher levels.

More importantly, the structure of the market is shifting. Perpetual futures now dominate with nearly $3.5T in volume, while spot trading has shrunk to just $0.8T. This cryptoquant data highlights the imbalance, suggesting the market is increasingly driven by leverage rather than real demand, a setup that often leads to fragile rallies and higher volatility.

Futures Dominate as Spot Demand Weakens

The latest CEX volume breakdown highlights a clear imbalance in market participation, with derivatives now driving the majority of activity. Total trading volume has cooled significantly, but more importantly, the composition has shifted—perpetual futures account for nearly $3.5T, while spot volumes lag far behind at around $0.8T.  

The chart shows that spot volume has been steadily declining since early 2025, indicating reduced long-term investor participation. At the same time, futures volume, after peaking near $10T, is also beginning to trend lower, pointing to a broader slowdown. However, the dominance of derivatives remains intact. This suggests that current market moves are largely fueled by short-term positioning and leverage.

Spot Activity Is Fading Across Exchanges

Spot trading volume is clearly trending lower across major exchanges, pointing to a steady decline in real market participation. After strong peaks in late 2024 and 2025, recent data shows a sharp cooldown into 2026, with volumes dropping across the board—even as leading platforms like Binance continue to hold dominance.

Spot volume represents real buying interest, and its decline signals that fresh capital is not entering the market at the same pace. Since the drop is broad-based and not limited to specific exchanges, it indicates an overall pullback in participation rather than a shift in liquidity. As a result, the market becomes more dependent on derivatives, making price action less stable and more prone to sharp reversals.

Futures Activity Is Cooling — But Still Dominant

Futures trading volume is starting to cool after months of elevated activity, reflecting a slowdown in leveraged participation. While volumes remain relatively high compared to historical levels, recent data shows a clear decline across exchanges into 2026, following peaks seen in late 2024 and 2025.

Futures still dominate overall activity, but the drop suggests that leveraged traders are becoming less aggressive. Since derivatives have been driving most of the market movement, this cooling phase indicates reduced speculative pressure. However, with spot demand already weak, the decline in futures activity adds another layer of caution, signaling that both real demand and leveraged momentum are fading together, which can lead to slower trends or sudden volatility.

Exchange Share Is Shifting as Volume Declines

Even as overall spot volume contracts, the distribution of activity across exchanges is gradually changing. Binance continues to dominate, but its share has been trending lower, with other platforms steadily gaining ground. This shift is subtle but consistent over time.

The market isn’t attracting new capital; it’s redistributing existing liquidity across more venues. As dominance spreads out, liquidity becomes less concentrated, which can reduce efficiency in price discovery. In a low-volume environment, this kind of fragmentation often leads to choppier moves and less reliable trends, as no single venue drives clear direction.

Wrapping it Up- Cooling Activity Signals a Fragile Market

The data points to a clear shift: trading activity across CEXs is cooling, and participation is weakening across both spot and derivatives markets. Total volumes have dropped sharply from their late-2025 peaks, while spot demand has shrunk to a fraction of overall activity. At the same time, liquidity is spreading across more exchanges instead of expanding.

This doesn’t necessarily mean the market is about to collapse, but it does signal a less stable environment. With lower spot participation and declining leverage momentum, rallies are likely to face slower follow-through and higher volatility. For sustained upside, the market will need to see spot demand and overall trading activity recover—otherwise, price movements may remain fragile and prone to sharp reversals.

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