Crypto Q2 in Numbers: A Complex Recovery, Records, and the Rise of Decentralized Trading

After a turbulent start to the year, the cryptocurrency market roared back in the second quarter of 2025.
According to CoinGecko’s comprehensive Q2 report, total crypto market capitalization climbed 24.0%, recovering $663.6 billion in lost value to close the quarter at $3.5 trillion, just shy of its January peak. But beneath the surface of this bullish resurgence lies a nuanced and shifting market landscape.
Market Overview: Price Action vs. Trading Behavior
Despite the headline growth in overall market value, average daily trading volumes continued their decline, dropping 26.2% quarter-on-quarter to $107.8 billion. This marked the second straight quarter of shrinking spot activity, a surprising contrast to rising asset prices and renewed investor optimism.

Bitcoin and Ethereum Take the Lead
Bitcoin (BTC) led the recovery, surging past the $100,000 mark and setting a new all-time high (ATH). Its dominance rose by 3.0 percentage points to 62.1% of total crypto market cap. Year-to-date, Bitcoin’s dominance has climbed 7.6 percentage points, reflecting an increasingly BTC-centric market.

Ethereum (ETH) also saw gains, rising from $1,805 to $2,488 in Q2, a 36.4% increase. Despite this, ETH remains below its 2025 opening price of $3,337.
Ethereum’s dominance ticked up by 0.8 percentage points to 8.8%, making it the only altcoin in the top seven to gain market share. Average daily transaction volume on Ethereum increased from 1.2 million to 1.3 million, while gas fees dropped from 6.9 to 3.5 Gwei.

Circle’s Blockbuster IPO Steals the Spotlight
One of the biggest events of the quarter was Circle’s initial public offering (IPO) on the New York Stock Exchange.
Oversubscribed by more than 25x, Circle’s stock debuted at $31 and closed its first trading day at $83.23. It later peaked at $298.99 on June 23, marking an 864.5% increase from its IPO price. This blockbuster performance has heightened expectations for upcoming IPOs from crypto heavyweights like Kraken, Gemini, and Grayscale.
Centralized Exchanges (CEX) Face Trading Slump
While the broader market surged, centralized exchanges saw notable declines in spot trading volumes.
Overall CEX volume dropped 27.7% quarter-on-quarter to $3.9 trillion. Binance maintained the lead with a market share of 37% to 39%, although its trading volume fell below $500 billion in both April and June.
Only three major exchanges, MEXC, HTX, and Bitget—posted quarter-on-quarter growth, rising 3.7%, 5.4%, and 3.0%, respectively.
MEXC and HTX displaced Crypto.com and Bybit to become the second and third-largest spot exchanges. Conversely, Crypto.com recorded the steepest drop, plummeting 61.4% to $216.4 billion, falling to the eighth spot after previously holding second place.

DEXs on the Rise: A Shift in Market Structure
In stark contrast, decentralized exchanges (DEXs) experienced robust growth. Spot trading volume on the top 10 DEXs surged 25.3% quarter-on-quarter to $876.3 billion, setting a new all-time high in the DEX-to-CEX trading volume ratio, which climbed from 0.13 to 0.23.
PancakeSwap emerged as the largest DEX, with a staggering 539.2% increase in volume from $61.4 billion in Q1 to $392.6 billion in Q2. This growth is largely attributed to Binance Alpha, launched in May, which routes trades through PancakeSwap. As a result, BSC overtook Ethereum, Base, and Solana as the most active chain for DEX trading.
Meanwhile, Solana-based DEXs like Orca, Meteora, and Raydium saw steep declines of 40.5%, 56.8%, and 73.4%, respectively, as meme coin hype faded and liquidity shifted to other ecosystems.

Record-Breaking Perp Trading on DEXs
Perpetual (perp) trading on DEXs also reached a new all-time high, hitting $898.0 billion in Q2. Hyperliquid led the pack with a dominant 72.7% market share, posting $653.2 billion in volume. It now ranks as the eighth largest perp exchange globally across both CEX and DEX platforms.
Only four DEXs, Hyperliquid, Aster (formerly APX Finance), RabbitX, and EdgeX, posted volume growth. Aster’s volume doubled after introducing its new Pro mode. In contrast, dYdX continued its downward trajectory, averaging just $5.3 billion in monthly volume, down 50% from January.
What Does the Future Hold?
The 2025 Q2 report captures a market in transition.
Bitcoin’s dominance is solidifying, institutions are warming to crypto through regulated vehicles like ETFs and IPOs, and DEXs are gradually capturing more trading activity. Yet, the retreat in CEX volumes and subdued altcoin performance indicate that enthusiasm is still unevenly distributed.
With the second half of the year underway, the key questions remain: Can Ethereum reclaim its highs? Will Circle’s IPO success open the door for more crypto listings? And how far can decentralized finance scale in a rapidly evolving market?
The answers will shape the next chapter of crypto’s post-recovery narrative.