
Stablecoin supply growth is often interpreted as a sign of rising speculation or impending market volatility. This assumption has become common as observers link expanding

Stablecoin supply growth is often interpreted as a sign of rising speculation or impending market volatility. This assumption has become common as observers link expanding

Crypto markets are often interpreted through price movements and trading volumes, yet these signals frequently lag behind underlying shifts in liquidity. As markets mature, analysts

Market stress in crypto is often associated with sharp price declines or sudden spikes in volatility, but these visible signals usually appear after underlying pressure
Crypto markets often appear driven by price movements, but price alone rarely explains why capital flows change direction. Behind visible volatility sits a quieter set

Stablecoins were initially judged almost entirely on their ability to maintain a peg, especially during periods of market stress. Price stability was seen as the

Stablecoins have moved from being simple trading instruments to becoming a core layer of crypto market structure. Among them, USDT plays a central role because

Institutional allocation through exchange traded funds remained heavily concentrated in bitcoin throughout 2025, with market data indicating that the asset consistently captured the majority of

USDT no longer exists on a single blockchain in any meaningful sense. In 2025, its supply is distributed across multiple networks, each with different transaction

For much of the past decade, growth was the primary signal analysts used to evaluate stablecoins. Rising supply, expanding market share, and increasing transaction volumes

Stablecoin velocity has become one of the most closely watched indicators in digital asset markets. Unlike supply or market capitalization, velocity focuses on how frequently