In May 2026, the number of active addresses on the Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC) network dropped sharply to just 2,134, marking the lowest level seen since the start of the year. This figure, calculated using a seven-day moving average by CryptoQuant’s on-chain analysis, highlights a significant decline in activity on the Ethereum-based version of Bitcoin.
DeFi activity slows to a crawl
WBTC serves as a popular bridge token bringing Bitcoin liquidity into the Ethereum ecosystem, especially for use in decentralized finance (DeFi) applications. Investors typically transfer WBTC to lend, provide liquidity, or use as collateral within DeFi protocols. However, the exceptionally low number of active WBTC addresses in May reflects a marked slowdown in transactions and transfers across DeFi platforms.
Analysis points out that no major incident, security breach, or unexpected event directly triggered this drop. Instead, market participants have adopted a wait-and-see stance, causing WBTC transfers and engagement in DeFi to grind almost to a halt.
Glossary: Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC) is an Ethereum-based token representing Bitcoin and built according to the ERC-20 standard. It makes Bitcoin accessible within DeFi and Ethereum-based applications, while the original Bitcoin is held securely as collateral.
According to CryptoQuant’s analysis, “Investors are no longer actively transferring WBTC to generate yield, provide liquidity, or post collateral. Activity in DeFi has dropped to its lowest level in a year.”
Sharp reversal after February spike
After a steady start to the year, WBTC activity briefly surged in early February. During the first week of February, the number of active addresses approached 5,400. This uptick proved short-lived; over the following weeks, transaction volumes dropped quickly. By March, figures had settled between 2,800 and 3,000 before declining even further in April.
Analysts explain that February’s sharp increase was not a precursor to a sustainable recovery. They commented that while the movement suggested the start of positive momentum, activity failed to maintain those levels, swiftly sinking back to yearly lows.
Liquidity exits both CEX and DeFi
Not only have DeFi metrics declined, but centralized exchanges have also seen notable developments. According to CryptoQuant data, there has been growing spot sell pressure for BTC on Binance, with substantial amounts of Bitcoin leaving the exchange. At the same time, net flows of stablecoins have turned negative, signaling shrinking buying power.
Binance’s 30-day moving average data revealed a surge of BTC inflows in February and March as prices sought to recover. However, intense selling activity kept markets under pressure, and stablecoin balances continued to fall, reducing potential demand on exchanges.
| Indicator | February 2026 | May 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| WBTC Active Addresses (7-Day MA) | Approx. 5,400 | 2,134 |
| Binance BTC Net Flows | Low | High inflows (selling pressure) |
| Stablecoin Net Flows | Low | Negative (decline) |
Analysts note an outflow of liquidity from both decentralized and centralized platforms, with no sign yet of new capital entering markets to trigger a renewed buying wave. The report highlights two crucial signals for a potential reversal: a recovery in active WBTC addresses or large-scale fresh stablecoin issuances entering exchanges. As of May 21, neither of these conditions has been met.
The overall picture shows a decline in risk appetite across both centralized and decentralized sectors of the crypto market. Investors remain on the sidelines, and markets are waiting for a new catalyst to restore meaningful momentum.




