Bitcoin trading volume falls to levels last seen in July 2023. On May 26, BTC traded near $76,600, down 0.72% over 24 hours.
According to TradingView price data, 24‑hour volume sits at $19.88 billion. Market capitalization is $1.53 trillion. The daily range is between $76,400 and $77,700.
Why Bitcoin trading volume falls amid Iran tensions
Traders reacted to renewed Middle East tensions. Reuters reported that U.S. forces struck missile launch sites and boats in southern Iran. U.S. Central Command called the action “self‑defense” and said the ceasefire remains in place.
Bitcoin briefly rose toward $77,700 on Monday. Then it moved back below $76,500. That leaves BTC close to an area where price has stalled several times during recent recovery attempts.
A potential Iran‑U.S. peace memorandum could reduce Bitcoin’s short‑term “war hedge” premium. It might reopen the Strait of Hormuz and lower energy‑market risk. Any sanctions relief could keep the longer‑term Bitcoin and stablecoin debate active.
Bitcoin spot trading volume falls 81% since October 2025
CryptoQuant contributor Darkfost said spot trading volume dropped 81% since October 2025. Current activity matches July 2023 levels, a period linked with weak bear‑market trading.
Binance still leads Bitcoin spot activity with $36.4 billion in volume. However, that is down from $198.6 billion in October 2025. Gateio volume fell 79.6%. Bybit volume dropped 66%.
The analyst linked the decline to a tough macro backdrop. Rising inflation and the longer U.S.‑Iran conflict pushed some investors toward commodities and equities instead of crypto.
Nevertheless, falling spot activity may also show that selling pressure is losing force. In past cycles, heavy volume contraction often appeared before volatility returned.
Network activity cools, but funding rates turn positive
Analyst Ali Charts noted that active addresses fell 39.80% over the last two weeks. They dropped from 821,000 to 494,000. This shows weaker short‑term activity as speculative traders stepped back.
Derivatives data tells a different story. CryptoQuant analyst Arab Chain said Bitcoin funding rates on Binance rose to about 0.0081. That is their highest level since December 2025. The analyst linked the move to renewed demand for long positions as BTC traded near $77,000.
Higher funding rates show that leveraged traders are paying more to hold long exposure. This can support a recovery if spot demand returns. However, it also raises liquidation risk if price turns lower quickly.
Earlier, funding data stayed weak for weeks during the April pullback. Binance perpetual funding rates remained negative for 46 straight days.
Bitcoin waits for volume confirmation
The current setup is split. Spot demand is weak, but derivatives activity is returning. Spot volumes have fallen sharply. Active addresses have dropped. BTC remains below its recent intraday high near $77,700.
At the same time, positive funding rates show some leveraged traders are coming back. Thinner spot volume can make price swings sharper.
For now, traders are watching whether Bitcoin can reclaim $77,700 and push toward $78,000. A clean move above that range would show that buyers are absorbing geopolitical pressure.
If Bitcoin loses the $76,000 area, selling pressure may return toward the next support zones. The wider market will track Iran headlines, funding rates, and spot volume for signs of a stronger trend.