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Policy

Stablecoin market sheds $10 billion, sharpest monthly drop since Terra collapse

The stablecoin sector has experienced its largest single-month decline since the collapse of TerraUSD in 2022, with total market capitalization falling by approximately $10 billion from its p

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
July 12, 2026
4 min read
NEWS
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The stablecoin sector has experienced its largest single-month decline since the collapse of TerraUSD in 2022, with total market capitalization falling by approximately $10 billion from its peak in May. Although this represents the steepest monthly drop in over two years, the contraction only accounts for about 3% of the sector’s total value, indicating that much of the gains from recent growth remain in place.

Leading stablecoins drive contraction

Tether (USDT), the most widely used stablecoin globally, saw its circulating supply fall from nearly $190 billion to $184 billion in recent weeks. Circle’s USD Coin (USDC) also contributed to the sector’s decline, with its total supply sliding to around $73 billion over the same period. As the two largest dollar-backed stablecoins, USDT and USDC together dominate on-chain liquidity for both centralized and decentralized exchanges.

Despite the significant dollar reduction, stablecoins’ total market capitalization remains well above levels seen prior to the recent expansion phase, signaling continued adoption across the cryptocurrency ecosystem.

StablecoinMay SupplyCurrent SupplyDollar ChangeUSDT$190 billion$184 billion– $6 billionUSDC~$74 billion~$73 billion– $1 billion

Market analysts have noted that recent stablecoin outflows are coinciding with reduced risk appetite in digital assets, persistent outflows from spot Bitcoin ETFs, and macroeconomic uncertainty affecting broader investor participation in cryptocurrencies.

Liquidity and trading activity

Stablecoins, serving as the main source of liquidity in the crypto market, are widely used for moving capital in and out of digital asset positions without the need to convert back into traditional fiat currencies. A declining stablecoin supply is often interpreted as capital exiting crypto markets or waiting on the sidelines, and recent numbers align with this sentiment.

Data shows that the combined supply of USDT and USDC had been falling since early May, mirroring slower trading activity and softer institutional inflows into the sector. This reduction overlapped with a multi-week stretch of net outflows from US spot Bitcoin ETFs, further reflecting wariness among investors in June.

Despite these factors, trading volumes for stablecoins on centralized exchanges rose 10.8% to nearly $981 billion in June. This marked the first monthly growth in five months, underlining stablecoins’ enduring role at the heart of daily crypto trading activity.

Growth in tokenized real-world assets

In contrast to the stablecoin supply contraction, tokenized real-world assets have continued to expand. The total market cap of these assets reached a record $30.1 billion in June, fueled by the ongoing growth of tokenized US Treasuries and public equities. Tokenized Treasury products alone grew to about $17 billion, as equity trading volumes rose to new heights.

Mini dictionary: Tokenized real-world assets, also called RWAs, are traditional financial assets such as government bonds, real estate, or public equities that are converted into digital tokens and traded on a blockchain. This allows investors to access, trade, and settle these assets with greater efficiency and transparency.

These opposite trends highlight continued institutional interest in blockchain-based financial infrastructure, even as short-term liquidity for stablecoins wanes.

Regulatory clarity and sector outlook

Regulatory progress has also offered a boost to the stablecoin market. Major issuers have recently gained new licenses and expanded institutional backing for their dollar-pegged digital assets.

Circle, the company behind USDC, received regulatory approval to operate as a federally regulated trust bank in the United States. This move enables the firm to directly manage reserves backing USDC and signals deeper integration between the digital asset industry and traditional finance systems.

With these shifts, market observers are closely watching whether stablecoin issuance will rebound in the second half of the year. Renewed supply growth could indicate a return of capital to the crypto ecosystem, while further declines may point to continued caution among investors.

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