Most stablecoin money is sitting with just a few big players. Tether [USDT] and Circle [USDC] still make up the largest share of the $307.7B supply, while newer names like Ethena [ENA] and Sky [SKY] are slowly growing.
And while all that money is in wait…
…here’s what you need to look at.
After Bitcoin’s recent correction, the Stablecoin Supply Ratio (SSR) fell. This is its steepest drop this cycle.
The inference is that Bitcoin’s [BTC] market cap fell much faster than stablecoin supply, leaving unusually high buying power with nothing to do.
This often happens when near local market bottoms. Liquidity is already in the system, but it hasn’t rotated back into Bitcoin yet. For that move to happen, the SSR would need to move higher, which would mean stablecoins actually being deployed.


Source: CryptoQuant
The risk is the timing. With macro conditions uncertain and global tensions still high, it’s not a stretch to assume that those with money may remain hesitant.
Still, as long as stablecoin supply holds near record levels, the cards will remain on the table.
Final Thoughts
- Stablecoins are at levels usually seen near market bottoms.
- With RWAs and tokenized funds at ATHs, capital is in wait before any rotation.