Liquidity often separates a market bottom from a prolonged bear phase.
The logic is simple: During a risk-off market, capital can either move to the sidelines or leave the crypto ecosystem altogether.
Understanding the difference between these two behaviors is key to identifying whether the market is approaching a bottom or entering a deeper bear phase.
Notably, this is where the latest stablecoin flows come into focus. As the chart below shows, the stablecoin market cap has fallen by nearly $10 billion since May, with $7.7 billion leaving in June alone, marking the largest monthly contraction since the Terra-Luna collapse in May 2022.

In other words, the crypto market has seen two straight months of liquidity leaving the ecosystem, with June posting the biggest stablecoin outflow in four years.
That’s a strong sign the market remains firmly in a risk-off phase, drawing clear parallels with the liquidity conditions seen during the 2022 bear market.
From a technical perspective, this liquidity contraction lined up with Bitcoin’s 3.6% correction in May and a 20.45% decline in June.
Together, these signals suggest BTC’s current correction is looking less like a bottoming process and more like the type of liquidity-driven weakness that defined the 2022 bear cycle.
The next question is whether that trend is starting to change.
Stablecoin dominance hints at Bitcoin’s next bottom
Normally, a risk-off environment typically drives capital into traditional safe-haven assets.
However, that’s not what happened this time. Gold closed May down 1.6% and June down 11.73%; even stablecoins recorded their largest monthly outflow.
In other words, the capital leaving stablecoins did not rotate into gold, suggesting investors weren’t simply shifting from one defensive asset to another.
According to AMBCrypto, that divergence could be one of the key signals to watch this cycle. As the chart below shows, Stablecoin Dominance (STABLE.D) has fallen 6.5% so far this month after climbing more than 20% over the previous two months.
At the same time, Bitcoin Dominance (BTC.D) has continued to hold around 60%, despite slipping nearly 3% over the same period.

Taken together, these signals suggest the liquidity contraction that accelerated through May-June may be starting to slow.
More importantly, with BTC.D still holding near 60%, and there is no meaningful rotation into gold, and capital remains largely “Bitcoin-centric.” That’s a notable shift from the 2022 bear market, where liquidity broadly exited risk assets instead of staying concentrated in Bitcoin.
Therefore, if STABLE.D continues to trend lower, it would suggest sidelined capital is gradually moving back into the market. That makes a bottom in STABLE.D one of the key signals to watch, as it could coincide with Bitcoin finding a bottom and beginning its next move higher.
Final Summary
- June saw the largest stablecoin outflow in four years, but the money didn’t move into gold, suggesting investors are staying on the sidelines.
- With STABLE.D falling and BTC.D holding near 60%, a bottom in stablecoin dominance could signal Bitcoin’s next move higher.

