Key Takeaways:
- Binance recorded $913 million in USDT net outflows over 24 hours
- Stablecoin reserves on the exchange have fallen 21% in the past month
- The outflows follow Binance's EU license setback and UK investor lawsuit
Key Takeaways:

Binance saw $913 million in USDT net outflows over 24 hours, the largest single-day stablecoin withdrawal from the exchange in recent months, according to partially verified on-chain data.
"The scale of the outflow suggests large holders are moving funds off-exchange, driven by a combination of regulatory uncertainty and self-custody preferences," CryptoQuant data showed, with stablecoin reserves on Binance declining 21% over the past month.
The $913 million figure follows two earlier anomalous outflows: $997 million on June 26 and $838 million on July 7, according to CryptoQuant. Together, they have pushed Binance's average daily stablecoin outflow to $115 million over the past week. The combined market capitalization of USDT and USDC has also contracted, with the 30-day change falling to negative $3.2 billion from zero in mid-May, indicating capital exiting the crypto system entirely rather than rotating between assets.
The liquidity drain leaves Binance more vulnerable to localized volatility at a time when the exchange is already navigating regulatory headwinds. Binance failed to secure EU-wide authorization under MiCA before the June 30 deadline, triggering a suspension of services for European users, with 70% of subsequent withdrawals directed to self-custody wallets. A separate lawsuit from nearly 1,700 British investors seeking at least £150 million adds to the pressure.
The outflows come as Binance's BNB token trades near $578 as of 14:00 UTC on July 10, down more than 50% from its all-time high of about $1,370. BNB's market capitalization stands at roughly $78 billion, keeping it the fourth-largest crypto asset by market value.
Stablecoin reserves on exchanges function as "dry powder" for buying dips. Sustained outflows mean holders are exiting positions or moving funds to DeFi protocols, cold storage, and over-the-counter desks, according to CryptoQuant analyst Axel Adler Jr. The monthly average stablecoin inflow to exchanges has fallen 18%, from $3.2 billion to $2.65 billion.
The regulatory backdrop has amplified the pressure. Binance's application for a license through Greece was expected to be rejected under MiCA, forcing the exchange to wind down EU services. The UK lawsuit, filed in late June, alleges Binance sold risky leveraged derivative products without proper authorization. Binance has said it will defend itself.
For BNB holders, the question is whether the token's ecosystem fundamentals can offset the exchange-level headwinds. BNB Chain still processes more than 16 million daily transactions with over 2 million active addresses and $13 billion in stablecoin market capitalization, per DefiLlama. The network's quarterly burn removed 1.57 million BNB worth roughly $1.02 billion in April.
Until Binance resolves its EU licensing status and the UK litigation clarifies, the stablecoin drain may continue to pressure both the exchange's liquidity and BNB's price.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.