
The numbers are there. And they’re not pretty. The total crypto market cap fell 20.4% in the first quarter of 2026, losing $622 billion to close March at $2.4 trillion. This puts the crypto roughly 45% below its October 2025 high. Two consecutive quarters of decline. It’s not a dive. It’s a trend.
So what motivated this? And what does this mean for the second trimester? Let’s go.
The trigger that no one saw coming
Most people blamed the market on macroeconomic sentiment. Fair enough. I mean there is a war. But there was a specific moment when things fell apart.
The sharpest part of the decline occurred between mid-January and early February, coinciding with the nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next chairman of the Federal Reserve. This signal indicated a potential hawkish turn in American monetary policy. The markets did not like it. The crypto sold out quickly.
The market then remained stable for the rest of the quarter, although the war between the United States and Iran added another layer of geopolitical uncertainty. Risk assets are at a standstill. The shelters have moved. Here’s the kicker. The asset that benefited the most from all this chaos was not Bitcoin. No gold. It was crude oil.
Crude oil gained in the first quarter. Bitcoin did not.
Crude oil surged 76.9% in the first quarter, fully reversing its 2025 decline. The move was driven by global supply shocks linked to the US-Iran conflict. Gold also held up. It gained 8.1%, continuing the record run started in 2025, supported by demand from central banks and its role as geopolitical coverage.
Bitcoin fell 22.0%, underperforming all major asset classes. As a reminder, the NASDAQ fell 7.1% and the S&P 500 fell 4.8% during their worst quarters since 2022. Bitcoin fell three times as much as stocks. This is not the narrative Bitcoin bulls want to tell.
Now, that’s not the whole story.
Stablecoins held the line
While everything else has sold out, stable coins does something interesting. They stayed there. The total market capitalization of stablecoins ended the first quarter at $309.9 billion, up slightly by $1.6 billion (0.5%) for the quarter. In a $622 billion drawdown environment, stagnation is actually a solid outcome. Stablecoins do their job as a liquidity anchor.
But the composition has changed. USDT experienced its first significant decline in supply since the second quarter of 2022, falling 1.6% to $184.1 billion. Meanwhile, USDC rose 2.4% to $77.1 billion.
Sky’s USDS soared 30.8% with the launch of Sky Agents, and WLFI’s USD1 rose 32.5% following an airdrop from Binance. These amounts are modest in absolute dollar terms. But they are evolving quickly and point to a stablecoin landscape that is gradually becoming more competitive. WLFI now has its own distinct issues with these Dolomites loans and governance issues. However, for the moment, they do not seem to affect the dollar.
I observed this closely today, as if two completely different things were blended into one narrative.
> $WLFI is clearly under pressure this week, lots of noise around Justin Sun, Dolomite loans, blacklist discussions, legal sentiment has taken a hit and the price is… pic.twitter.com/XEswxT75At
– Henry (@LordOfAlts) April 14, 2026
USDT is losing ground for the first time in almost four years and is worth watching.
CEX volume hit three-year low
If you want a number that reflects the mood of the first quarter, this is it.
Spot trading volume on the top 10 centralized exchanges fell 39.1% in the first quarter to $2.7 trillion, compared to $4.5 trillion in the fourth quarter of 2025. March was the weakest month of the quarter, with just $0.8 trillion in volume. This is the lowest monthly total since November 2023.
Retail remains idle. Binance held its own with a 37% market share. MEXC was the only other exchange in double digits, at 10%. Everyone is fighting for the leftovers. Each of the top 10 exchanges saw volume declines, with declines ranging from 23% to 55%. HTX had the worst quarter, dropping from $294 billion to $134 billion in volume. This represents a collapse of 55% in a single quarter.
Solana still owns DEX volume
On decentralized exchanges, the story is more nuanced. Solana held the top spot spot trading DEX in Q1 with 30.6% dominance, even as its total volume fell 26.5%. The lead narrowed as the quarter ended. In March, Ethereum actually surpassed Solana on a monthly basis, with a 27% share compared to Solana’s 26%. BSC was second overall for the quarter with 24.5%.
A name to watch: Monad launched its mainnet at the start of the bear market in November 2025 and has continued to rise. It is now the 10th most active channel for DEX spot trading. Getting into a bear market is difficult. Gaining ground still says something.
Overview
The first quarter of 2026 was a quarter marked by contraction. Lower prices. Lower the volume. And a drop in confidence. Cryptocurrencies sold off harder than stocks while oil surged on geopolitical fears. Stablecoins have remained stable. CEX volume has reached new lows.
That said, the stability of stablecoins during a sharp decline is a true structural signal. This means that capital remains in the ecosystem, without leaving it entirely.
The question that arises in the second quarter is whether this parked capital will return to the sidelines. Or if the bear market deepens. All this is in the Sector report for the first quarter of 2026 from our friends at CoinGecko.
We will wait for the response.

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