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Markets

A record wall of USDT just left exchanges

Data from @SantimentData shows that $USDT on Ethereum recorded a $5.03 billion net outflow from exchanges on July 8, the largest single-day withdrawal the network has ever seen. The previous

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
July 9, 2026
3 min read
NEWS
A record wall of USDT just left exchanges
CryptoCompass editorial visual for markets coverage.

Data from @SantimentData shows that $USDT on Ethereum recorded a $5.03 billion net outflow from exchanges on July 8, the largest single-day withdrawal the network has ever seen. The previous record was a $4.43 billion outflow on June 19, 2022. According to Santiment, the move reflects large wallets shifting stablecoin liquidity into self-custody, DeFi protocols, or OTC desks. In other words, a significant pool of ready-to-trade dollar liquidity just left centralized exchanges.

Santiment also flagged that USDT's network realized profit and loss hit a five-month high of $2.92 million on the same day, driven largely by the sheer volume of tokens moving at once rather than any meaningful change in USDT's value. For context, this kind of signal can cut both ways: less stablecoin liquidity on exchanges may reduce immediate dip-buying power and put short-term pressure on $BTC and altcoins, but if the capital is being repositioned rather than exiting crypto entirely, it could rotate back in once confidence improves.

A Burn That Complicates the Picture

The outflow landed a day after a separate but related development. According to CryptoQuant, Tether burned $2.5 billion worth of $USDT on the Ethereum network on July 7, marking its largest single burn since February 2026. The burn reduced the circulating supply by about 1.3% and was driven by large customer redemptions rather than a strategic move to cut supply, with the USDT peg remaining stable around $1.00.

A large Tether burn can reflect redemptions, treasury management, or cross-chain rebalancing and is not, on its own, enough to call the move bearish. The important part is the timing: the burn came while aggregate stablecoin supply was falling and Binance's Tron-based USDT liquidity was also shrinking. Binance's USDT balance on TRON fell to about $806 million in July, dropping below $1 billion for the first time in months. The macro backdrop added another layer: Bitcoin fell sharply from above $64,000 to near $62,000 between July 7 and 8, driven by geopolitical tensions after Iran fired on commercial vessels and the U.S. retaliated.

Dry Powder or an Exit?

The broader stablecoin picture urges caution. Active stablecoin addresses fell 36.2% and average daily transfer volume dropped 47.5% over the past 30 days, on-chain data shows. Falling aggregate stablecoin capitalization, Binance's Tron reserve moving below $1 billion, and one of the largest Ethereum USDT burns in months all point to weaker liquidity conditions unless new minting or exchange inflows reverse the trend.

Whether the $5 billion outflow represents dry powder waiting to be deployed or capital heading for the exit remains the key question for traders to watch in the days ahead.

Sources:Coinpedia: Tether Sees Historic $5B Exchange OutflowCoindoo: Stablecoin Supply Tightens as Tether Burns $2.5B USDTCoinReporter: Tether USDT Supply Contracts Across Ethereum and TRON Networks