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U.S. Share of Bitcoin, Ether and Solana Trading Volume Falls Below 45% as Asia Catches Up

source-logo  coindesk.com 03 June 2025 06:31, UTC
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The rebound in digital assets since early April has been marked by a significant shift in activity, with Asian trading hours gaining market share in global bitcoin

$BTC$105,330.21
, ether
$ETH$2,606.63
and solana
$SOL$159.10
spot trading volumes, while the U.S. steadily loses ground.

The U.S. trading hours' share of the spot volume in the three major tokens has dropped below 45% on a 30-day simple moving average basis, having peaked at an all-time high of over 55% at the beginning of 2025, according to data tracked by institutional crypto prime brokerage firm FalconX. The latest reading is the lowest since pro-crypto Donald Trump's victory in the November presidential election.

Meanwhile, Asian trading hours now account for nearly 30% of global activity, with Europe accounting for the remainder.

Slower activity during the U.S. represents a change in investor mix driving the price action, according to FalconX.

"It may point to increased influence from non-U.S. portfolio flows or suggest that U.S. investors are focusing more on markets beyond spot crypto," FalconX's Head of Research David Lawant said in a note shared with CoinDesk.

$BTC, $ETH and $SOL's spot exchange trading volume (30-day moving average). (FalconX Research)

Bitcoin, the leading cryptocurrency by market value, has surged 40% to $105,000 since hitting lows under $75,000 in early April, according to CoinDesk data. Ether and solana have surged 87% and 68%, respectively, during the same period.

Low-volume $BTC rally

Although bitcoin's price has surged to new highs, global spot trading activity hasn't yet recovered to levels seen early this year.

According to FalconX, daily volume in $BTC spot markets, which averaged over $15 billion on a 30-day rolling basis after the November election, declined during the April sell-off and has since held below $10 billion.

A low-volume rally is often viewed as a bear trap. However, that's not necessarily the case this time, as ETFs have recently gained popularity as investment vehicles.

According to FalconX, the cumulative volume in the 11 U.S.-listed spot bitcoin ETFs has surged from approximately 25% of the global spot $BTC market volume to a record 45% in under two months.

The spike in ETF volume stems mainly from bold directional bets rather than non-directional arbitrage bets like the cash and carry trade, involving a long position in the ETF and a simultaneous short position in the CME $BTC futures.

The 11 spot ETFs have amassed $44 billion in net inflows since inception in January 2024, according to data source Farside Investors. BlackRock's IBIT, the largest of them all, attracted $6.35 billion in May, the most since January 2025, indicating growing institutional demand for $BTC amid trade tensions and bond market jitters.

"All of this points to room for growth and suggests that ETFs are likely to remain a major force behind demand in this rally," Lawant said.

Volume in U.S. ETFs as a share of $BTC spot market volume. (FalconX Research)
coindesk.com