Skip to content
Active Currencies: 17,408
Market Cap: $2.232T
Bitcoin Dominance: 56.18%
24h Market Cap Change: $-3.29

Stablecoins are minting but not moving – Is crypto liquidity drying up?

8 billion minted, 5.7 billion gone: Is crypto entering risk-off mode?

stablecoins

Key Takeaways

Stablecoins surged in supply but failed to deploy, with $8 billion in new USDT minted yet $5.7 billion yanked from exchanges. Sidelined capital stayed parked, reinforcing a broader risk-off tilt.


Tether [USDT] didn’t sit out July’s turbulence. In fact, it mirrored the market’s pulse. Its market cap jumped to $163.60 billion, tagging on nearly $8 billion in fresh supply. 

That’s a 3.72% gain for the month, marking the sharpest 30-day climb since November’s 10.89% surge, when risk appetite kicked into gear. Simply put, Bitcoin’s [BTC] run to $123k didn’t happen in a vacuum. 

Instead, it tracked closely with the stablecoin liquidity rotating into the system. And yet, $5.7 billion stablecoins were yanked from exchanges, creating a significant imbalance. 

Stablecoins
Source: Sentora (Formerly IntoTheBlock)

As illustrated in the chart above, in July 2025, stablecoin outflows (pink) surged, while inflows (blue) held relatively flat, marking one of the largest monthly outflow spikes since early 2022.

When you stack that against the $8 billion in fresh USDT minted, it paints a lopsided picture: Supply’s ramping, but actual risk deployment is lagging. 

The result? A liquidity-deficient environment where capital might be circulating, but it’s not hitting the order books. Does this behavior point to a broader risk-off skew, capping “market-wide” upside?

Are stablecoins signaling a risk-off shift?

Notably, Bitcoin’s Stablecoin Supply Ratio (SSR) spiked from 9.39 to 10.48 by mid-July, right as BTC tagged its $123k high. 

For context, a rising SSR reflects shrinking stablecoin liquidity relative to Bitcoin’s market cap, signaling that dry powder isn’t keeping pace with BTC’s upward move.

Despite new USDT being printed, most of that capital stayed sidelined and failed to rotate onto exchanges. Hence, BTC’s rally likely hit a wall, not from lack of supply, but from lack of follow-through.

BTC SSR
Source: Glassnode

The $5.7 billion in net stablecoin outflows only reinforced this. Investors hedged instead of rotating in, adding resistance just below the highs. 

Unless stablecoin liquidity returns and SSR cools off, sidelined capital stays parked, keeping risk-off pressure in play and capping BTC’s upside.

Disclaimer: AMBCrypto's content is meant to be informational in nature and should not be interpreted as investment advice. Trading, buying or selling cryptocurrencies should be considered a high-risk investment and every reader is advised to do their own research before making any decisions.

Ritika Gupta

Journalist

Ritika Gupta is a coin-based journalist at AMBCrypto who focuses on how economic and political trends impact cryptocurrencies. A social sciences graduate from Gargi College, she reports on AI, DeFi, Web3, and blockchain, using her hands-on experience to turn complex crypto developments into clear, practical insights for readers.

AMBCrypto was founded in 2018 with a mission to simplify and bring the latest blockchain and cryptocurrency news to our readers. We have quickly grown into the digital news source for an emerging generation of cryptocurrency enthusiasts, reaching more than a million readers on a monthly basis, across the globe.