Stablecoin Market Drops $1.04B This Week as USDC Leads Outflows While USDT Holds 58% Dominance

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The latest figures from defillama.com show the fiat-pegged token economy pulled back over the past week, shedding $1.04 billion since March 21. Seven of the top ten stablecoins posted net outflows during that stretch.

USDC Sees $1.37B in Outflows as Stablecoin Market Shrinks

As of this weekend, defillama.com stats show tether ( USDT) continues to dominate the sector with a market capitalization of $184.068 billion, even after a modest seven-day dip of -0.03%, or just over $56 million in outflows. USDT currently accounts for 58.42% of the stablecoin sector’s total valuation, which stands at $315.072 billion after the $1.04 billion loss.

Circle’s USDC follows with a market cap of $77.723 billion, though it logged a steeper weekly decline of -1.73%. That places USDC’s outflows at roughly $1.372 billion since March 21. In third position, sky dollar (USDS) carries a market cap of $8.146 billion, down 1.18% over the past week, while Ethena’s USDe sits fourth at $5.904 billion after a modest 0.32% weekly decline.

Rounding out the top five, Sky’s DAI stands at a $4.555 billion market cap as of Saturday, posting a 0.32% weekly decline in line with USDe’s performance. World Liberty Financial’s USD1 stablecoin shed -0.54% this past week and now stands with a market cap of $4.404 billion. PYUSD ranks seventh with a market capitalization of $3.87 billion, recording a sharper weekly drop of 4.80%.

Positions eight through ten moved against the broader trend, each posting net inflows over the same stretch. Blackrock’s BUIDL takes the eighth spot with a $2.699 billion market cap and a 6.15% weekly gain. Just behind it, Circle’s USYC ranks ninth at $2.609 billion, leading this cohort with a 7.26% increase over the past week.

Rounding out the top ten, Global Dollar’s USDG holds a $1.692 billion market cap, posting a 1.23% weekly gain. The $1.04 billion in outflows coincides with a broader pullback across the crypto economy this week, wiping out a large share of early March’s gains. Still, the week’s stablecoin data points to selective contraction rather than systemic stress, with capital rotating instead of exiting entirely.

The largest issuers absorbed the bulk of redemptions, while smaller entrants captured incremental inflows. If this pattern holds, the stablecoin stack may be entering a phase defined less by expansion and more by redistribution, where positioning and utility quietly shape the next leg.

FAQ 🔎

  • What caused the $1.04 billion drop in the stablecoin market?

The decline was driven by net redemptions across seven of the top ten stablecoins, led primarily by USDC outflows.

  • Why is USDC seeing larger outflows than USDT?

USDC recorded heavier redemptions as capital shifted away from it while USDT maintained dominant market share.

  • Which stablecoins gained inflows this week?

Blackrock’s BUIDL, Circle’s USYC, and Global Dollar’s USDG posted net inflows despite the broader market decline.

  • What does this stablecoin shift mean for the crypto market?

The data suggests capital rotation within stablecoins rather than full exits, signaling repositioning instead of broad market stress.

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