Senior cryptocurrency investor: Blockchain is showing a siphoning effect on capital
Author: Jonah Burian
Compiled by: Jiahua, ChainCatcher
Software has devoured the world. Blockchain is sucking in all capital.
The popularity of stablecoins and on-chain economic activities have formed a mutually reinforcing closed loop, making this growth structurally difficult to reverse. The mechanism behind this is something that few people truly notice:
Stablecoins on-chain → Developers create use cases to absorb funds → These use cases attract more stablecoins → Cycle repeats
Each cycle pulls in more funds. Capital migrated to the chain becomes productive, deeply embedded in lending markets, DEXs, and derivatives. Pulling this capital back into traditional infrastructure means giving up all this utility. Thus, capital stays, and the flywheel keeps turning.
This closed loop has given birth to an entirely new financial economy, generating billions of dollars in revenue each year. @CremeDeLaCrypto and I believe that the same mechanism is starting to pull all capital onto the chain.
Every turn of the flywheel creates value
When $1 billion of new stablecoins enters the on-chain economy, it gets distributed throughout the financial system, reused over a hundred times each year, generating tens of millions of dollars in annual revenue.
Every $1 billion of stablecoins generates about $122 billion in economic activity annually, with a turnover rate of about 122 times.¹
For reference: The dollar in PayPal turns over about 40 times a year.² The circulation speed of the US M2 is only 1.4 times.
In other words, a dollar on the blockchain works about 3 times as efficiently as a dollar in PayPal and 87 times as efficiently as a dollar in M2. This is because stablecoins circulate repeatedly in payments, DEXs, lending, etc., while traditional capital is stuck in T+1/T+2 batch settlement systems, which simply cannot achieve this.
Here is the composition of the $122 billion annual economic activity generated by $1 billion of stablecoins⁵:
Payments and transfers: about $68 billion Derivatives: about $34 billion DEX: about $18 billion Lending: about $1 billion RWA: about $400 million
Every $1 billion of stablecoins introduced generates about $19 million in protocol revenue annually.⁴ This revenue supports the next generation of products and attracts the next billion-scale stablecoins to enter the market.
It should be noted that the $19 million only covers the directly observable on-chain revenue at the protocol level. It does not include the approximately $35 million earned by stablecoin issuers per billion dollars each year (assuming a risk-free interest rate of 3.5%), nor does it include the substantial revenue generated by higher-level wallets, payment processors, fiat exchange channels, custody, and compliance.
Looking at the entire on-chain economy today, stablecoin issuers earned over $13 billion from floating deposits alone in 2025 (Tether over $10 billion, Circle $2.7 billion), and stablecoin-related protocol revenue from DEXs, lending protocols, derivatives platforms, and blockchains exceeded $5 billion.³
Capital will not leave
Once capital is on-chain, it becomes productive, allowing the closed loop to continue. It is deployed in lending markets, DEXs, and derivatives. Returning to traditional tracks means giving up these utilities: T+1 settlement, restricted by bank operating hours, and isolated ledgers. Therefore, capital tends to stay.
Since early 2020, the supply of stablecoins has grown about 60 times, from about $5 billion to about $300 billion, currently accounting for about 1.4% of US M2.
In 2025 alone, newly minted stablecoins exceeded $120 billion, marking the largest single-year increase in history, with stablecoin trading volume reaching $33 trillion.
Each cycle is larger
Most of the above has been driven by retail capital and crypto-native use cases. The next few cycles of the flywheel may be driven by institutions, with a significant scale leap.
Institutional capital is beginning to migrate on-chain, which in turn incentivizes more asset issuers to tokenize products to compete for this capital.
@BlackRock's BUIDL and Apollo's on-chain credit fund are just early examples, but they will certainly not be the last. The scale of on-chain tokenized RWAs has grown from about $8 billion less than two years ago to about $25 billion. BUIDL alone holds over $2 billion in assets.
The presence of institutional funds on-chain will attract more tokenized government bonds, private credit instruments, and structured products, as issuers always follow the money. The more products there are, the more reasons institutions have to move capital over.
Currently, RWAs are the smallest category in the entire tech stack and one of the smallest business lines in terms of revenue scale. But it is one of the fastest-growing categories, connecting the on-chain economy with the multi-trillion-dollar institutional capital market.
The infrastructure built by the retail flywheel over the past five years (DEXs, lending markets, payment channels) is now being used by institutions with the same set.
Derivatives are the best example. Whenever traditional markets are closed, and risks accumulate over the weekend (such as escalating tensions in Iran or shocks to commodities), trading volume increasingly shifts to on-chain perpetual contracts on platforms like Hyperliquid. Trading volumes for crude oil, silver, and gold surge during traditional exchange downtime.
The great migration of capital
Stablecoins are the first real-world assets to go on-chain. Dollars migrate from bank accounts to the blockchain, and the flywheel mechanism ensures they stay and compound.
@CremeDeLaCrypto and I believe that capital will soon migrate on a large scale from traditional infrastructure to on-chain. We have already seen this process: issuers tokenizing assets, institutional capital entering, and more issuers tokenizing products to compete for capital, thereby pulling more capital onto the chain.
The flywheel that once absorbed stablecoins is now beginning to absorb stocks, credit, government bonds, and structured products. We are still in the early stages of this process. That flywheel, which quietly pushed the stablecoin supply up 60 times in six years, will ultimately pull all assets onto the chain.
Methodology
¹ Stablecoin 122 times = $33 trillion adjusted trading volume in 2025 (Artemis Analytics, cited by Bloomberg and TRM Labs) / $270 billion average supply (DefiLlama, average of $230 billion in April 2025 and $310 billion in March 2026).
Trading volume covers the 2025 calendar year, and the average supply covers the past 365 days as of March 2026. Even so, this may underestimate the turnover rate: in January 2026 alone, about $10 trillion of stablecoin transfers occurred, meaning the actual trading volume over the past 365 days is far higher than $33 trillion.
A more conservative filtering method (Visa/Allium Labs) estimates that the adjusted transfer volume in 2025 is about $10 trillion. Even at this level, the annual turnover rate of stablecoins is about 40 times, comparable to PayPal, and 28 times faster than M2 (1.4 times).
² PayPal 40 times = $1.79 trillion total payment transaction volume (TPV) for fiscal year 2025 (SEC filings) / about $45 billion customer balance (10-K form). This comparison is only for directional reference: stablecoin trading volume includes all on-chain transfers; PayPal TPV includes transactions funded by bank cards.
³ $19 million generated per $1 billion = $5.1 billion stablecoin-related protocol revenue (Token Terminal, past 365 days as of March 2026) / $270 billion average supply (DefiLlama).
We use protocol revenue instead of total fees (about $14 billion) because most fees flow to liquidity providers, depositors, and stakers, rather than the protocol treasury.
Revenue only belongs to stablecoin-related activities: DEX trades of stablecoin pairs (about 50% of DEX revenue), derivatives with stablecoins as collateral (about 87%), stablecoin lending (about 90%), and network fees generated from stablecoin transfers (Tron accounts for about 90%; other chains account for 15-25%). Excludes ETH/BTC exchanges, meme coin trading, and NFT minting.
⁴ $5.1 billion attributable revenue (note ³) / $270 billion average supply = $19 million generated per $1 billion. Excludes issuer floating deposits (about $35-42 million per $1 billion) and off-chain revenue (wallets, fiat exchange channels, custody).
⁵ Estimates based on Artemis stablecoin activity data, Artemis/Castle Island report "Stablecoin Payments Built from the Ground Up" (October 2025), Token Terminal, and DefiLlama data, converted based on $33 trillion annual trading volume.
"Payments and transfers" = all non-DeFi capital flows (P2P, B2B, CEX capital flows, wallet transfers, not just merchant payments). The lending category uses the amount of funds disbursed (flow), rather than the outstanding balance (TVL/stock), to maintain consistency with other categories.
You may also like

Japan’s Three Megabanks Plan Joint Stablecoin Issuance in Fiscal 2026
MUFG, SMBC, and Mizuho reportedly plan to jointly issue fiat-pegged stablecoins in fiscal 2026, signaling Japan’s growing push into bank-led digital payment infrastructure.

Humanity Discloses H Token Dual-Chain Attack Details, With Losses on Ethereum and BSC Exceeding $36 Million
Humanity said the H token attack across Ethereum and BSC caused more than $36 million in losses after leaked ProxyAdmin keys enabled malicious contract upgrades and token minting.

White House Discusses CLARITY Act With Law Enforcement Ahead of Senate Vote
The White House discussed the CLARITY Act with law enforcement ahead of a Senate vote, focusing on illicit finance risks and developer protections.

$75 billion in foreign capital has fled, and South Korean retail investors have absorbed it all using leverage

Bitcoin Trading Guide 2026: Strategies for Experienced Traders

What Is XAUT and PAXG? Why Tokenized Gold Is Booming in 2026

Cryptocurrency CEXs are flocking to sell US stocks, and traditional brokerages are facing an "uninvited guest."

Will the SpaceX IPO Hurt Bitcoin? Here's What Traders Are Watching

Foreign selling in the South Korean stock market accelerates, with cumulative net sales reportedly reaching $75 billion this year
On June 9, The Kobeissi Letter, citing Goldman Sachs data, reported that global investors are selling South Korean stocks at an unusually rapid pace. In the latest trading session, foreign investors sold about $801 million worth of Kospi constituent stocks again; total foreign outflows last week reached about $10 billion, and the market has been in net foreign selling on nearly every trading day over the past month. According to the data cited in the report, foreign investors have sold about $75 billion worth of South Korean stocks so far this year. Meanwhile, South Korean retail and institutional investors together recorded roughly $69 billion in net buying over the same period, suggesting that the market’s main buying support has come from domestic capital rather than returning overseas funds. The information currently disclosed still mainly comes from The Kobeissi Letter’s retelling and Goldman Sachs data summaries, while public details on the statistical period and the specific definition of “selling” remain relatively limited.

Fortune Warns of Strategy’s Financing Structure Risks as Bitcoin Premium Narrows
Fortune warned that Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury model faces growing financing risks as MSTR’s net asset premium narrows and preferred stock dividend pressure increases.

Ferrari Challenge Le Mans: Carl Moon to Dominate in WEEX Livery

Sahara AI Responds to SAHARA’s Sharp Drop: No Contract or Product Security Issues Found, Internal Investigation Underway
Sahara AI responded to SAHARA’s 60% price drop, saying no token contract or product security issues have been found and an internal investigation is underway.

WEEX Deposit/Withdrawal Dynamic Island: Your Asset Status, Always in Sight

Scaling Crypto Derivatives: The Digital Asset Infrastructure Behind High-Volume Trading
In the fast-moving digital asset ecosystem, derivatives platforms face an extreme architectural test. High-leverage futures markets demand more than just standard security—they require absolute operational precision, zero-latency matching engines, and ironclad structural scalability, all while navigating intense market volatility.
As global platforms scale to meet these demands, the industry is shifting away from rigid, monolithic setups toward a more agile, "decoupled" infrastructure philosophy.
The Blueprint for High-Volume Copy TradingFor elite global exchanges like WEEX (founded in 2018), this architectural choice becomes critical when scaling high-volume retail features like social copy trading. When thousands of users automatically mirror the real-time strategies of elite traders simultaneously, it triggers sudden, monumental spikes in concurrent transactional volume.
To prevent execution latency or settlement bottlenecks during these peak volatility events, a platform's primary engine must remain entirely dedicated to risk management, copy-trade synchronization, and order matching.
The Architectural Rule: New-generation platforms must separate front-end user execution engines from heavy backend infrastructural overhead to eliminate operational friction.
By separating these layers, platforms can maintain complete sovereignty over their trading environments and user experiences while strategically aligning with institutional-grade infrastructure ecosystems. This strategic framework allows modern exchanges to leverage advanced Digital Asset Custody infrastructure such as Cobo’s behind the scenes, ensuring that backend wallet management scales elastically alongside trading spikes.
Capitalizing on Market Momentum and 400× LeverageIn a derivatives arena where platforms offer up to 400× leverage on perpetual contracts, capital efficiency and market agility are core business metrics. To capture market momentum, an exchange needs the ability to rapidly expand its asset offerings, supporting everything from legacy crypto assets to sudden, trending altcoins across a massive library of trading pairs.
Adopting a flexible, scalable Wallet-as-a-Service (WaaS) solution such as Cobo’s could completely rewrite the development timeline for high-growth exchanges. Instead of spending months of engineering capital building out custom backend wallet architectures for every new blockchain network, platforms can deploy localized infrastructure in days.
This agility allows platforms to instantly scale their listings to over a thousand trading pairs without compromising security or delaying time-to-market. It mirrors the exact operational advantages seen during high-velocity market events, similar to how advanced wallet infrastructure empowers platforms during sudden asset surges; allowing exchanges to pass that speed and liquidity directly to their global user base.
A Mature Foundation for GrowthThe synergy between trusted infrastructure ecosystems and global trading platforms represents the natural evolution of a maturing crypto market. As WEEX continues to scale its global spot and derivatives offerings for over 6 million users, adopting robust backend paradigms proves that platforms no longer have to compromise between cutting-edge trading velocity and uncompromised structural security.

Morning Report | BitMine increased its holdings by 126,971 ETH last week; trader Eugene announced his exit from the crypto market

Wang Chuan: How can one not feel anxious after the neighbor Old Wang made thirty times profit by investing in storage stocks? (Seven) - A quarter-century cycle

Get Paid to Onboard? Try WEEX’s New Homepage with Rewards for Registration, Deposit & Trade

WEEX Custom Layout: Build Your Perfect Trading Workspace in Seconds
Japan’s Three Megabanks Plan Joint Stablecoin Issuance in Fiscal 2026
MUFG, SMBC, and Mizuho reportedly plan to jointly issue fiat-pegged stablecoins in fiscal 2026, signaling Japan’s growing push into bank-led digital payment infrastructure.
Humanity Discloses H Token Dual-Chain Attack Details, With Losses on Ethereum and BSC Exceeding $36 Million
Humanity said the H token attack across Ethereum and BSC caused more than $36 million in losses after leaked ProxyAdmin keys enabled malicious contract upgrades and token minting.
White House Discusses CLARITY Act With Law Enforcement Ahead of Senate Vote
The White House discussed the CLARITY Act with law enforcement ahead of a Senate vote, focusing on illicit finance risks and developer protections.
