Crypto Market Liquidity Shrinks Ahead of Holidays

In brief

  • The 60-day market cap growth of Tether’s USDT stablecoin has slowed from $15.38 billion to $4.83 billion, indicating a severe drop in new capital entering crypto markets.
  • Analysts say substantial “dry powder” exists in stablecoin reserves, but it is not being deployed aggressively, capping upside momentum.
  • Bitcoin is likely to consolidate between key levels of $81,000 and $102,000 until liquidity improves or a decisive breakout occurs.

Cryptocurrency market liquidity is tightening as a key measure of capital inflows shows a pronounced slowdown ahead of the holiday season.

The 60-day market cap change of Tether’s USDT, the world’s largest stablecoin, has dropped from $15.38 billion on November 1 to $4.83 billion as of Monday, according to on-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant.

This sharp deceleration in new stablecoin issuance reflects a broader contraction of available capital, signaling that the market is entering a low-volume, low-liquidity regime typical of the Christmas period.

“Over the past month, stablecoin supply was essentially stuck within $285-$290 billion, with some assets, including USDT, occasionally showing slight declines within this range,” Yaroslav Patsira, Fractional Director at CEX.IO, told Decrypt. “This suggests that funds are still in the ecosystem, but they’re just not being deployed aggressively.”

Patsira pointed to stablecoin exchange reserves—a measure of readily deployable capital—as evidence of this caution. Reserves recently hit an all-time high of $80 billion, then saw an 11% drop during Bitcoin’s recent recovery to $94,000, followed by a slight uptick during this week’s sell-off.

While “dry powder exists,” Patsira said, he noted that, “capital is cautious, waiting for lower prices or rotating short-term without significant commitment.”

As a result, such an environment places a clear ceiling on potential gains.

For Bitcoin, it means liquidity is “still relatively resilient, but getting weaker, with upside capped without renewed ETF demand or stablecoin expansion,” according to Patsira.

Ethereum and other altcoins, which rely more heavily on capital rotation and robust risk-on sentiment, are even more sensitive to these tight conditions. On prediction market Myriad, owned by Decrypt‘s parent company Dastan, users place just a 23% chance on an altseason in Q1 2026.

What next for Bitcoin?

The critical question is where prices consolidate within this liquidity drought.

Bitcoin may continue trading between the “true mean” price—currently around $81,000—and the short-term holder cost basis of approximately $102,000, the CEX analyst noted.

“Resolution from consolidation could break either direction,” he said.

A breakout above the short-term holder cost basis could fuel a move toward new highs, as seen in mid-2021, while a failure to hold support above the true mean could signal deeper bearish momentum, similar to the first half of 2022.

While major macroeconomic overhangs like the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision have receded, the market is likely to continue its choppy, sideways trend without an injection of fresh, committed capital, experts previously told Decrypt.

Despite the expert comments, Myriad users remain bullish on Bitcoin, assigning a 64% chance to the cryptocurrency retesting $100,000 rather than dropping to $69,000.

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Source: https://decrypt.co/352522/crypto-market-liquidity-shrinks-ahead-of-holidays