How crypto’s liquidity engine grew after Terra’s collapse

Crypto’s liquidity engine is now worth over $300 billion

article-image

JLStock/Shutterstock modified by Blockworks

share


This is a segment from the Empire newsletter. To read full editions, subscribe.


If crypto were an ocean, Terra was a whirlpool the size of a Maelstrom.

And by all accounts, when that Maelstrom collapsed in on itself, in May 2022, the chaos sucked the liquidity right out of crypto markets for a solid year.

Stablecoins were crypto’s primary liquidity machine at the time and massive chunks of the market simply pulled the plug.

Tether withstood a month-long $16 billion “bank run” on USDT, while Circle net burned over $30 billion USDC between June 2022 and November 2023. 

At the same time, Paxos was winding down Binance stablecoin BUSD — redeeming about $20 billion worth of stablecoins over a 12 month period. A period that coincidentally ended just as bitcoin’s current run was heating up in late 2023.

Looking back, it’s clear that liquid staking and restaking tokens may have helped plug the leak as the rolling liquidations, bankruptcies, and fraud cases played out.

This chart plots the market cap of stablecoins (blue) alongside liquid staking (purple) and restaking (pink) tokens since Q1 2021. 

Combining the three token classes forms what I’ve called crypto’s liquidity engine.

Notice that as tens of billions of dollars were being drained from crypto via stablecoin redemptions — starting with Terra and into the middle of the chart — liquid staking tokens expanded to mitigate those losses. 

It kept crypto’s liquidity engine on an even keel for a solid 10 months, with liquid (re)staking tokens taking off at the first hint of a reversal of the stablecoin redemption trend.

Terra is now a blip in crypto market history. Stablecoin supplies have just set a new all-time high close to $194 billion (about $6 billion higher than just before Terra), while liquid staking and restaking tokens are also at a fresh combined peak of $92.5 billion.

That makes crypto’s liquidity engine nearly $300 billion deep — with apparently no Maelstrom in sight.


Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters:

Tags

Upcoming Events

Old Billingsgate

Mon - Wed, October 13 - 15, 2025

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

recent research

Research

article-image

The deal adds Luxembourg AIFM structure as Keyrock files MiCA application in Liechtenstein

article-image

US prosecutors weigh dropping independent oversight of Binance as part of $4.3 billion settlement review

article-image

Reports suggest the UK government is planning new coordination with US regulators on cryptocurrency oversight to strengthen market supervision

article-image

The initiative aims to ease enterprise and DePIN migration to decentralized systems

article-image

A four-week $2M audit contest kicked off Sept. 15 as Devnet-5 gets tested

article-image

The napkin math on a potential Base token