Bitcoin Reserves Fall To 2017 Levels, The U.S. Loses Its Crypto Market Share
Key Points:
- More than half of the Bitcoin Reserves that crypto firms hold for their customers has moved to offshore and international exchanges due to unclear regulations in the United States.
- The decline in BTC reserves on American exchanges is due to the absence of a clear rule book for the crypto industry. Regulators have resorted to an enforcement-based approach, driving crypto firms to offshore locations.
- The U.S. is losing its crypto market share as regulatory uncertainty drives firms and assets offshore, with the decline in BTC reserves on American exchanges and the market cap of U.S.-based stablecoins plummeting by 35%, losing $15 billion so far in 2023.
Bitcoin reserves on U.S.-based crypto exchanges have fallen to 2017 levels, according to a report by CryptoQuant. The report suggests that more than half of the BTC that crypto firms hold for their customers has moved to offshore and international exchanges due to unclear regulations in the United States.
The decline in BTC reserves on American exchanges is due to the absence of a clear rule book for the crypto industry. Regulators have resorted to an enforcement-based approach, driving crypto firms to offshore locations. As a result, several exchanges have decided to exit the U.S., with others ceasing certain products and services due to violation accusations.
Regions like the EU and Hong Kong, which have developed comprehensive regulations for the nascent economy, are experiencing an inflow of capital, talent, and digital asset firms. Hong Kong, in particular, has opened up to crypto companies and stated that they would adopt the “same activity, same risks, same regulation” principle for entities akin to traditional financial firms.
In addition, CryptoQuant’s research found that the market cap of U.S.-based stablecoins has plummeted by 35%, losing $15 billion so far in 2023. Meanwhile, the U.S. remains the world’s dominant player in the Bitcoin mining industry. However, the country could lose that position due to bad regulation, as the government is targeting miners with the possibility of higher taxes. The U.S. is losing its crypto market share as regulatory uncertainty drives firms and assets offshore.
The decline in BTC reserves on American exchanges and the market cap of U.S.-based stablecoins shows that the country is gradually losing its market share of emerging and existing sectors as de-dollarization heightens. The trading volume of international crypto exchanges is four times greater than that of U.S.-based platforms. Bitcoin’s spot trading volume dominance in the U.S. has fallen below 2017 levels and is currently at 21%. American exchanges have little-to-no exposure to perpetual futures trading markets, which have a volume of 11x that of spot trading volume, as firms are not allowed to offer the service.
DISCLAIMER: The information on this website is provided as general market commentary and does not constitute investment advice. We encourage you to do your own research before investing.
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