Bitcoin spot trading activity has fallen sharply across centralized exchanges, reaching its lowest levels in years. Data cited by market commentator Su Hu shows Bitcoin’s spot trading volume dropped 81% from its October 2025 peak.
Binance recorded monthly spot trading volume of $198.6 billion in October 2025. That figure has since declined to approximately $36.4 billion. Across all centralized exchanges, total spot trading volume fell to $4.3 trillion in March 2026.
The March figure represented a 48% decline from the October 2025 peak. It also marked the lowest level since October 2024. Spot trading activity weakened further in April, reaching a 25-month low and continuing its downward trend.
The decline followed the November 10 market crash, when liquidations reportedly exceeded $19 billion. Since that event, spot trading volumes have decreased each month across major exchanges.
Trading activity has become increasingly concentrated among the largest cryptocurrency exchanges. According to the data, roughly 90% of market liquidity is now held by leading platforms.
Binance accounted for 32% of global spot market share in March 2026. During parts of 2025, the exchange controlled as much as 41% of the market. Smaller exchanges have seen declining participation as liquidity shifted toward larger venues.
The concentration of trading activity has coincided with lower overall market participation. The data suggests that market activity is increasingly centered on major exchanges and larger participants.
Observers note that spot markets typically reflect activity from everyday cryptocurrency traders. Reduced spot volume therefore indicates lower engagement from participants who commonly trade based on market narratives and short-term opportunities.
The decline in activity follows a period of choppy price movements after the 2025 market peak. Trading conditions have remained uneven, contributing to weaker participation across spot markets.
The decline in spot activity has occurred alongside growing attention toward other asset classes. Market participants have increasingly focused on stocks, gold, and commodities during recent months.
According to the commentary, these markets currently offer clearer narratives and more consistent trends. By comparison, cryptocurrency markets have faced lower enthusiasm and reduced speculative participation.
Despite lower activity, the analysis does not characterize reduced retail participation as inherently negative. Lower-volume environments can coincide with periods when stronger market participants gradually absorb available supply.
Su Hu argued that ordinary investors face challenges obtaining the information available to larger market participants.
He advised maintaining reasonable allocations to alternative cryptocurrencies while considering other assets that provide greater confidence.
The commentary also addressed Ethereum’s market position. It stated that Ethereum’s primary challenge is not only price weakness but the possibility of an extended period of low-level consolidation.
According to the analysis, Ethereum may require a new narrative capable of attracting capital, developers, and broader market consensus.
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