Centralized Crypto Exchanges Are Slowly Losing Ground to DeFi Counterparts

0 5

Centralized Crypto Exchanges Are Slowly Losing Ground to DeFi Counterparts

Centralized crypto exchanges are slowly losing ground to their DeFi counterparts, according to an in-depth data analysis conducted by Decrypt.

DeFiLlama decentralized exchange (DEX) volume data and CoinGecko total cryptocurrency trading volume data shows that the percentage of crypto trading volume that happens on DEXs compared to total trading volume went from 4.6% in February to over 7% this month. This is an increase of the DEX-fueled trading volume portion of over 52%.

Centralized Crypto Exchanges Are Slowly Losing Ground to DeFi Counterparts

Source: Adrian Zmudzinski

Messari senior research analyst Kunal Goel told Decrypt that multiple factors are fueling the DEX market share growth. He cited “the growth of meme coins and long-tail assets” as one reason, explaining that they tend to be listed on DEXs first and don’t appear on centralized exchanges until much later—if they last that long.

“Onchain UX has improved with low fee, high throughput on Solana and Ethereum L2s” he added, highlighting the progress making decentralized finance (DeFi) solutions increasingly easy to use.

DeFiLlama data further shows that in the past 24 hours, DEX volume accounted for 22% of all trading volume. The crypto price aggregator notes that this percentage is meant to represent the dominance of decentralized exchanges over aggregated decentralized exchanges and centralized exchanges.

So far in 2024, DEX volume has seen a slow and steady increase.

It went from $133.5 billion in January to $179.5 billion this month, showing an increase of roughly 34%. This year’s high was reported in March, when both CEX and DEX volume saw a major uptick to $4.8 trillion and $266.89 billion respectively.

Goel noted that at the time “Bitcoin hit fresh all-time highs in March and trading activity is typically positively correlated with price and sentiment.” Looking into the future, he expects centralized exchanges to move on-chain and disrupt their own business model before others can. He added that “Base and BNB Chain are the prominent examples.”

TradingView also shows a DeFi market cap dominance chart, in percentage. Currently at 3.86%, it has fallen from 4.47% on Jan, 1 and reported a 2024 high of 4.81% on Feb. 25. Goel noted that this is unexpected since “DEX volumes are a key driver for DEX value so it is a little contradictory.”

DeFi is a catchall term for a group of financial tools built on a blockchain—this includes DEXs, exchanges operating mostly on-chain. The primary purpose of DeFi is to allow anyone with internet access to lend, borrow and bank without going through middlemen.

Similarly, the primary purpose of DEXs is to allow anyone with internet access to trade or even provide liquidity in exchange for an interest. DeFi and DEXs are one of the major areas of focus of dapp (decentralized application) development, which have seen considerable adoption this year.

Edited by Stacy Elliott.

Source

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.