Crypto spot volume on centralized exchanges fell to $679 billion in April 2026, the lowest monthly level since October 2023. The drop reflects a grinding bear market that has drained activity across spot and futures.
Beneath the falling totals, the market is changing shape. Trades are growing larger and more institutional, while traditional assets such as gold and oil now trade actively on crypto venues, according to a new CryptoQuant report.
The Contraction Runs Across Spot and Futures
Total spot volume has fallen sharply from its late-2024 peak near $2.6 trillion. That marks a decline of roughly two-thirds from the high. CryptoQuant ties the slide to an ongoing crypto bear market that has suppressed trading since 2025.
Perpetual futures volumes fell in parallel. Leverage appetite contracted alongside spot price weakness, the report said. The pullback points to traders cutting risk rather than adding it.
Bitcoin (BTC) traded near $62,000 on June 5, well below its October 2025 peak above $122,000, according to CoinGecko. The current downturn has been slower and, unlike the 2022 collapse, has had no cascading failures.
Crypto Spot Volume Pools Into Fewer Exchanges
The volume that remains is concentrating on a small group of deep venues. Binance, Bybit, Gate, and Crypto.com led cumulative spot volume so far this year, CryptoQuant said.
CoinGecko data shows a similar pattern. Binance handled about 23% of spot volume across top-tracked exchanges on June 5, with Bybit and Gate ranking next. The five largest venues together took close to 40% of that volume.
Average Bitcoin trade sizes have risen on spot and futures since 2025. CryptoQuant reads the trend as institutional players making up more of the remaining activity. Larger tickets tend to favor exchanges with the deepest order books.
Gate led those average trade sizes at the margin. Kraken and OKX also ranked high, a sign of larger-scale execution. The shift mirrors the bear market price action that has thinned out smaller traders.
Traditional Assets Move Onto Crypto Rails
Trading of traditional assets on crypto exchanges reached record highs in 2026. Demand centered on gold and silver, while oil gained momentum on the US-Iran conflict.
Gate and Binance accounted for roughly two-thirds of that traditional futures volume. The pattern shows traders using crypto venues for around-the-clock macro exposure. That access matters most when traditional markets are closed on weekends and holidays.
In perpetual futures, liquidity is clustered on Gate, Binance, OKX, and Bitget. Hyperliquid’s trading volume has also emerged as a fast-rising competitor in that market.
The headline numbers point to a market in retreat. The composition of what remains, however, suggests a structural shift toward institutions and traditional assets that could outlast the downturn.
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