Crypto exchange performance weakened through the opening quarter as market appetite faded, and CryptoQuant’s public exchange data shows derivatives continued to overwhelm spot demand even as activity slowed.
TL;DR Key Points
- CryptoQuant’s public exchange report shows monthly CEX volume cooling early in the quarter while perpetuals remained the dominant trading venue.
- CoinGlass market-share data shows derivatives volume fell quarter over quarter, even as Binance kept the largest share.
- The cleanest quarterly signal is structural, not directional: verified public data points to lower turnover and heavier leverage use, not a confirmed spot-led recovery.
Q1 2026 Market Context Set the Tone for Exchange Performance
A single secondary summary said CEX trading volume fell roughly 48% from an October 2025 high to about $4.3 trillion in March 2026, according to unconfirmed reports, but the publicly verifiable CryptoQuant report only confirms the early-quarter slowdown.
In CryptoQuant’s annual exchange report, total monthly CEX volume was about $7.2 trillion in January 2026 and $5.8 trillion in February 2026. The same report shows perpetuals at roughly 84% of activity and spot at roughly 16%, a mix that points to traders staying in leverage-heavy markets while overall turnover cooled.
That perps-versus-spot split matters because it suggests a market still leaning on short-term positioning rather than broad accumulation. It also fits Coinlive’s recent coverage of Ray Dalio’s dollar-debasement case for Bitcoin and a parallel bid for speculative narratives in smaller-cap token rotations.
Which Exchange Metrics Mattered Most in CryptoQuant’s Q1 2026 Readout
Derivatives volume showed the clearest slowdown
CoinGlass reported Top-10 CEX plus Top-5 DEX perpetual volume fell to $21.0 trillion in Q1 2026 from $27.1 trillion in Q4 2025. That quarter-over-quarter drop lines up with CryptoQuant’s softer monthly totals and reinforces that the slowdown was market-wide, not isolated to one venue.
Binance still held the deepest derivatives liquidity
CoinGlass said Binance handled about $4.90 trillion in Q1 2026 derivatives volume, equal to roughly 34.9% share among the Top-10 exchanges tracked. In Cointelegraph’s report on the same shift, Bitget Research chief analyst Ryan Lee framed that result as further evidence of Binance’s lead in derivatives.
“Binance’s performance in Q1 2026 solidified its position as the leading derivatives exchange.”
Ryan Lee, Bitget Research, via Cointelegraph
Inflow and reserve signals remained secondary to trading mix
The accessible public materials in this brief do not provide audited quarter-wide exchange inflow, outflow, or reserve tables. Because CryptoQuant’s verified public data instead centers on the 84% perpetual versus 16% spot split, the strongest evidence points to traders using exchanges mainly for leveraged exposure rather than signaling conviction through large spot deposits or withdrawals.
What Q1 2026 Exchange Trends Could Mean for the Next Quarter
If spot participation does not recover from the 16% level seen in CryptoQuant’s early-2026 dataset, exchange activity may keep favoring fast hedges and short-duration trades over directional positioning. That would fit the mixed macro and policy tape Coinlive has been tracking, including its recent roundup of April 11 market-moving headlines.
Lower aggregate derivatives volume, a still-derivatives-heavy trading mix, and Binance’s dominant share together suggest that liquidity concentrated on the biggest venues while traders cut back on outright risk. That is a recap, not a forecast, but the verified public data argues for caution against reading one weak quarter as proof of a full market reset.
Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
