Crypto trading liquidity has not disappeared in 2026, it has clustered around the biggest venue in the market. Binance has already cleared about $1.09 trillion in trading volume with 112 days still on the clock, while the rest of the field sits far behind, as per CryptoQuant data. The same data shows MEXC at roughly $284.9 billion, Bybit at $242.3 billion, Crypto.com at $219.9 billion, Coinbase at $209.3 billion, OKX at $195.2 billion, Bullish at $189.3 billion, Bitget at $141.4 billion, KuCoin at $127.4 billion and Poloniex at $113.3 billion.
On that basis, Binance is doing nearly four times the volume of MEXC and accounts for a little more than a third of the combined trading shown in the CryptoQuant post. That gap matters because it cuts against the idea that crypto is simply sitting in a dead period. The market mood has been cautious, and in many corners outright muted, but activity has not gone anywhere. Instead, it has migrated toward the places where traders can still move size quickly and where the order books are deep enough to absorb it.
Binance Dominates 2026 Trading
Binance, more than any other exchange on the chart, is acting like the main gravity well for that flow. The picture is less about broad retail enthusiasm and more about concentration. When sentiment weakens, liquidity often scatters. In this case, the chart suggests the opposite is happening. One reason Binance continues to pull in that kind of activity is the way it has expanded beyond the narrow old model of spot trading.
Binance launched TradFi perpetual contracts in January, starting with gold and silver, and the exchange has since broadened the offering into a much wider set of traditional finance assets that can be traded around the clock and settled in USDT. Binance’s own academy materials now describe a lineup that includes commodities, index ETFs and major stocks such as Nvidia, Apple and Microsoft, all packaged inside the same futures ecosystem.
In early April, Binance said its TradFi derivatives business had already produced a $7.6 billion single-day peak in gold trading alone and that average daily volume in the segment had risen to more than $8.6 billion in April, while Binance kept more than 40 percent market share. That kind of product expansion helps explain why some of the activity on the exchange is no longer purely crypto-native.
The market backdrop also helps make sense of the chart. Bitcoin is trading around $77,656 and ether around $2,328 at the time of writing, according to live price data. Both are well off the extremes of the past few months, but they are still holding above the kind of levels that would suggest a full breakdown in risk appetite. Yesterday, Bitcoin climbed to $79,481, its highest level since January, while Ethereum rose to $2,398.75 as investors responded to relief around the Iran ceasefire story.
Today, though, prices have cooled again as geopolitical tension in the Middle East keeps traders cautious and risk assets wobble. The result is a market that is still alive, but far from settled. That sort of price action matters for exchange volumes. When Bitcoin and Ethereum break out of tight ranges, even briefly, traders rush back into venues with the best execution and the most liquid derivatives books.
That is why Binance’s lead is so important. It is not just winning because it is the largest brand. It is winning because, in moments like this, the market naturally tends to cluster where it can trade fast, hedge quickly and move between assets without friction. The CryptoQuant chart is therefore not only a ranking of exchanges. It is a snapshot of where market participants feel most comfortable taking risks.
The concentration of flow on Binance also fits a larger industry shift toward products that blend crypto infrastructure with traditional assets. Goldman Sachs recently filed for its first Bitcoin ETF product, while other major institutions have continued to explore new ways to package digital asset exposure. That trend supports a market where traders are not only speculating on coins, but also using crypto venues as a fast route to express views on everything from gold to stocks to indexes.
Binance has leaned directly into that demand. Its TradFi perpetuals line, launched in January and expanded rapidly afterward, gives the exchange an edge that is bigger than a normal spot market share comparison. It makes Binance look less like a crypto exchange and more like a 24-hour macro trading hub that happens to sit on crypto rails. That is why the CryptoQuant chart feels important even beyond the headline number.
Binance’s $1.09 trillion is not just a large figure. It is a signal that the market still has serious participation, even if the crowd is not euphoric. The volume is concentrated at the top, but it is still very much there. For traders, that means the exchange ecosystem remains active enough to support large moves, fast rotations and aggressive hedging. For the broader market, it means the current softness in sentiment should not be confused with a collapse in engagement.