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Capital rotated into “stablecoins” and wrapped assets over the past 24 hours, while the two largest cryptocurrencies—Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH)—recorded sizeable net outflows, pointing to a more defensive shift in positioning amid changing market liquidity.
According to Cryptometer data as of Thursday 03:35 UTC, Bitcoin (BTC) recorded approximately $1.9 billion in inflows and $2.2 billion in outflows over the prior 24 hours, resulting in a net outflow of $329.6 million. Ethereum (ETH) posted $1.0 billion in inflows versus $1.4 billion in outflows, for a net outflow of $357.4 million, the largest net outflow among major assets in the period.
Risk-sensitive altcoins also saw capital leave the market. Dogecoin (DOGE) logged a net outflow of $15.1 million, while NOT and Toncoin (TON) recorded net outflows of $11.7 million and $11.1 million, respectively—suggesting traders reduced exposure outside the large-cap complex.
In contrast, stablecoins attracted fresh capital. Tether (USDT) registered $179.7 million in inflows and $133.5 million in outflows, producing a net inflow of $46.1 million. USD Coin (USDC) also posted a net inflow of $43.6 million.
The strongest inflow was concentrated in Wrapped Beacon ETH (WBETH), which led all tracked assets with a net inflow of $51.5 million. The outcome is often associated with “yield strategies” or exchange-linked wrapped products, where traders seek flexibility without fully increasing spot ETH exposure.
The divergence—heavy net outflows in BTC and ETH alongside steady stablecoin and wrapped-asset inflows—suggests a market leaning toward “capital preservation” and tactical positioning. If the pattern persists, it could indicate traders keeping “dry powder” on-chain while limiting directional exposure until clearer catalysts emerge.
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