Share this article

Bitcoin Trading Volume Surged to $2.8T in January to August Period

The rise in crypto volatility has been accompanied by increased market participation in the bitcoin market, Kaiko said.

Updated Sep 10, 2024, 5:20 p.m. Published Sep 10, 2024, 6:54 a.m.
jwp-player-placeholder
  • BTC's cumulative volume in the first eight months amounts to $2.87 trillion.
  • It's a sign of increased market participation due to crypto and macro-specific uncertainty.

The bitcoin market reached unprecedented activity in the first eight months of 2024, surpassing the record notional trading volume seen during the bull market of 2021.

The cumulative trading volume or the dollar value of the number of BTC bought and sold on centralized exchanges amounted to $2.874 trillion in the first eight months, according to Paris-based data provider Kaiko.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

That's nearly 20% higher than the volume of $2.424 billion registered in the first eight months of 2021 and the highest since 2012.

"The rise in crypto volatility has been accompanied by increased market participation, at least in the bitcoin market," Kaiko said in the weekly report, discussing the record-setting trading volume.

Data from charting platform TradingView show bitcoin's 10-day realized or historical volatility surged to an annualized 100% in April as strong inflows into the U.S.-listed spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and expectations for Fed rate cuts drove the cryptocurrency's price to record highs above $70,000.

The volatility picked up again early last month as concerns about the U.S. economy and the unwinding of the yen carry trade destabilized risk assets, including cryptocurrencies.

Bitcoin Jan-Aug trading volume. (Kaiko)
Bitcoin Jan-Aug trading volume. (Kaiko)

More For You

More For You

Bitcoin losing $70,000 is a warning sign for further downside

a sketched graph, heading downward, on a piece of paper

Crypto majors soften while Asian equities rebound modestly, with traders continuing to weigh quantum fears, ETF flows and a possible shift in bitcoin’s broader trend.

What to know:

  • Bitcoin look weak after failing to keep gains above $70,000.
  • Weakness in large caps could soon filter through to small caps, which have been resilient lately.
  • On-chain data suggest the market is in a stress phase without a clear capitulation bottom.
  • Debates rage over impact of quantum-computing risks, a controversial BIP-110 spam-reduction proposal and shifting institutional flows.