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Policy

Stablecoin market supply falls $7.7 billion in June, led by USDT and USDC declines

The stablecoin market experienced a sharp contraction in June, with the total supply dropping by $7.7 billion to nearly $312 billion. This marked the largest single-month decline since the co

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
July 13, 2026
4 min read
NEWS
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The stablecoin market experienced a sharp contraction in June, with the total supply dropping by $7.7 billion to nearly $312 billion. This marked the largest single-month decline since the collapse of TerraUSD in May 2022, erasing more than $10 billion from the record highs reached the previous month.

Stablecoin Leaders Drive Outflows

According to data from DeFiLlama, the combined stablecoin supply hovered at approximately $312.23 billion at the end of June. Tether’s USDT, which remains the world’s leading stablecoin by market capitalization, accounted for $184.15 billion of the total. Circle’s USDC, the second-largest, held a supply of about $73.41 billion.

In June, the circulating supply of USDT fell from roughly $190 billion in May, resulting in a decrease of about $6 billion. USDC experienced a similar shift, dropping by approximately $7 billion since its March peak of $80 billion. These two tokens continued to account for the vast majority of global stablecoin liquidity.

The combined declines in USDT and USDC made up the majority of the contraction in the stablecoin market. While smaller regulated issuers reported growth during this period, their increases were not enough to counteract the drawdowns in the two largest stablecoins.

Paul Howard, a senior director at trading firm Wincent, described this reduction as a “small retreat,” emphasizing that the industry is still viewed as a long-term growth space. He also pointed out that the market’s current shrinkage remains well below the 26% contraction seen in 2022.

The events of 2022, including the collapse of the Terra protocol and insolvency filings from major crypto lenders and FTX, had triggered a much more severe market drawdown. In contrast, the recent decline did not lead to stablecoins breaking their dollar pegs or create a wider crisis in digital asset markets.

Stablecoins serve as primary settlement and quoting assets across both centralized and decentralized exchanges, underpinning much of the crypto trading ecosystem. Analysts have suggested that declining stablecoin supply may reflect greater redemption of tokens for bank dollars or an outflow of capital from the crypto industry.

Reduced supply can also decrease the purchasing power available for dollar-denominated assets such as Bitcoin and Ether. This, in turn, may negatively affect market liquidity during periods of selling pressure. Despite this, market observers note that the fall did not disrupt stablecoin pegs or create short-term instability among major tokens.

Trading activity for crypto investment products in the United States mirrored these outflows, as US-listed Bitcoin exchange-traded funds saw redemptions totaling more than $4 billion in June, marking their weakest monthly performance since launch.

Conversely, the market for tokenized real-world assets diverged from the general crypto trend. Blockchain-based tokenized assets recorded on-chain valuation exceeding $30 billion in 2026, spurred mainly by tokenized US Treasury products, investment funds, and private credit products.

CoinDesk Research reported that trading volumes in tokenized equities surged 145% in June, reaching a record $3.86 billion. This spike highlighted ongoing demand for blockchain-based financial products, even as traditional crypto liquidity remained subdued.

Mini dictionary: Tokenized real-world assets are digital representations of traditional financial instruments—such as bonds, equities, or real estate—issued and transacted on blockchain networks for greater accessibility and transparency.

StablecoinMay SupplyJune SupplyChangeUSDT$190 billion$184.15 billion– $6 billionUSDC$80 billion (March)$73.41 billion– $7 billionTotal stablecoinsRecord high (May 2026)$312.23 billion– $7.7 billion (June)

Regulatory Landscape and Outlook

Regulation of the stablecoin market is evolving alongside these shifts. The United States introduced the GENIUS Act, placing oversight of payment stablecoins at the federal level and introducing new standards related to customer identification, sanctions, and reserve requirements.

Despite the slowdown, both USDT and USDC maintained their dollar pegs, and stablecoin transaction volumes and underlying supply metrics held relatively steady compared with more volatile periods in the past.

Further reductions in stablecoin supply could signal additional liquidity leaving crypto markets in coming months. By contrast, a rebound would suggest the market is consolidating after a rapid expansion earlier in 2026. Market participants are closely watching upcoming data to determine whether capital is exiting crypto altogether or shifting among different issuers and blockchain-based products.

The current reduction, while the largest since 2022, has not resulted in a crisis or widespread loss of stablecoin pegs, suggesting relative stability even amid investor outflows.

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