The speed at which stablecoins are being pulled has caused a drop in short-term risk appetite.
While Bitcoin’s correction fell further (now down roughly 36% from its early October highs), traders have been unwinding leverage. OI has fallen more than 40%.

Source: CryptoQuant
December was the steepest decline in ERC-20 stablecoin reserves across major exchanges in this cycle. These tokens are usually on exchanges ready to be deployed.
This time, they are being pulled out instead. The change is easily visible on Binance, where an inflow trend flipped into nearly $1.9 billion in net outflows over 30 days. This is an obviously cautious move.
Stablecoins aren’t quitting crypto altogether though
They are simply shifting across networks instead of being on exchanges. Over the past week, total stablecoin supply still grew by about $509 million.


Source: Lookonchain
The biggest inflows were seen on TON, which added over $500 million, followed by Ethereum and Polygon. In contrast, networks tied more closely to trading activity, such as Solana and Tron, saw large outflows.
Investors aren’t taking any new risks, and are simply waiting for clear signs before committing.
Defensive, not disappearing
Today, most major stablecoins are backed largely by U.S. Treasuries and other short-term government assets, making them more or less low-risk money market instruments.


Source: IMF
This explains why capital is staying in stablecoins even as it leaves exchanges. Investors are choosing safety and yield over chaos. Until confidence returns, this defensive positioning is likely to persist.
Final Thoughts
- Stablecoins are leaving exchanges at record speed as traders cut risk.
- Capital is on safer chains until confidence returns.
Source: https://ambcrypto.com/stablecoins-are-leaving-exchanges-and-traders-arent-buying-the-dip/