Crypto derivatives volume surged to nearly $86 trillion in 2025, according to a CoinGlass year-end review, as institutions increased hedging and ETF-linked strategies while the market endured a major liquidation shock in October.
Derivatives take the lead in crypto price discovery
Crypto trading in 2025 leaned even more heavily toward derivatives—contracts such as futures, perpetual swaps, and options that let traders gain exposure without holding the underlying coins.
CoinGlass data shows the derivatives market processed about $86 trillion in total volume over the year, averaging roughly $265 billion per day. The scale matters because derivatives activity often sets the tone for broader market pricing, especially during volatility when leveraged positions are forced to unwind.
At a market-structure level, 2025 showed a clear shift away from purely retail-driven, high-leverage speculation. More flow came from:
- Hedging (reducing downside risk for spot holdings)
- Basis trading (capturing the spread between spot and futures)
- ETF-related positioning (using futures to manage exposure and cash flows)
- Cash-margined contracts favored by regulated and institution-facing venues
Top exchanges dominated derivatives volume
Binance remained the largest venue by cumulative derivatives volume in 2025, processing $25.09 trillion, which CoinGlass estimates as 29.3% of global derivatives trading.
OKX, Bybit, and Bitget followed, each in the $8.2–$10.8 trillion range, with the top four exchanges together accounting for 62.3% of total market share—evidence of continuing consolidation among the biggest platforms.
Exchange derivatives volume in 2025 (CoinGlass)
| Exchange | 2025 Derivatives Volume (USD) | Share / Notes |
| Binance | $25.09T | 29.3% share |
| OKX | $8.2T–$10.8T | Top-4 cluster |
| Bybit | $8.2T–$10.8T | Top-4 cluster |
| Bitget | $8.2T–$10.8T | Top-4 cluster |
| Others | Remainder | Fragmented long tail |
A “regulated rails” effect grows alongside ETFs
A major theme in 2025 was the tightening link between traditional finance and crypto derivatives.
In the U.S., spot Bitcoin exchange-traded products (ETPs) were approved in January 2024, creating a new and persistent channel for institutional participation. With spot ETFs established, strategies that pair spot exposure with futures hedges became more common.
A widely discussed example is basis trading, where market participants go long spot (including via ETFs) and short futures—often on regulated venues—to earn an annualized spread when futures trade at a premium.
The year also brought more policy clarity around stablecoins. The GENIUS Act of 2025 established a federal framework for payment stablecoins, which many market participants view as another step toward integrating crypto markets with more standardized compliance and supervision.
Open interest rose, then snapped lower during October stress
While volume shows how much trading occurred, open interest shows how much risk remained on the table—active positions not yet closed.
CoinGlass estimates global crypto derivatives open interest climbed to a record $235.9 billion on October 7, before a sharp deleveraging phase erased more than $70 billion in positions during a rapid selloff. Even after the drawdown, year-end open interest of $145.1 billion was still reported as about 17% higher than the start of 2025.
Open interest snapshot (CoinGlass)
| Metric | Level | What it signaled |
| Record open interest | $235.9B (Oct. 7, 2025) | Peak leverage/positioning |
| OI wiped out in selloff | >$70B decline | Rapid forced deleveraging |
| Year-end open interest | $145.1B | Still higher vs. start of year |
October liquidation shock becomes the defining stress test
The most severe disruption arrived in early October. A tariff-driven macro headline triggered a rapid downturn that cascaded through leveraged positions.
CoinGlass estimates forced liquidations totaled about $150 billion across 2025, with the largest burst in October: over $19 billion in liquidations in roughly 48 hours. Most of the damage hit bullish exposure—about 85–90% of liquidations were reported as long positions, meaning traders positioned for rising prices were wiped out as prices moved the other way.
The episode highlighted how crypto derivatives—despite deeper liquidity and more professional participation—can still transmit shocks quickly when:
- leverage is concentrated in one direction,
- liquidation engines fire across multiple venues at once, and
- correlated risk is carried through similar strategies across platforms.
Why “institutionalization” can increase fragility during extremes
Institutional participation is often associated with market maturity: better risk controls, deeper liquidity, and more disciplined hedging. But 2025 also showed the trade-off: institutions can create longer leverage chains through interconnected strategies—spot + futures + options + financing—often across multiple venues.
When volatility spikes, those chains can amplify moves rather than dampen them:
- Hedges become crowded and unwind together.
- Cross-market spreads compress suddenly.
- Margin rules vary between venues, creating uneven liquidations.
- Stablecoin liquidity and on/off-ramp conditions influence collateral behavior.
Bitcoin and Ethereum remained the dominant contracts, and demand increasingly concentrated in venues and products that institutions can access at scale—especially cash-margined and regulated contracts.
CME’s role: a key institutional venue, with leadership contested late-year
Through 2025, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) remained central to institutional crypto derivatives—particularly Bitcoin futures tied to traditional market infrastructure.
CoinGlass research during 2025 highlighted periods where CME led Bitcoin futures open interest, reflecting strong institutional positioning. However, market leadership in open interest was not static. By late December 2025, market commentary indicated that Binance had regained the top spot in Bitcoin futures open interest as basis-trade profitability narrowed—illustrating how quickly positioning can rotate when yields and risk appetite change.
What this means for 2026
The 2025 record—$86 trillion in derivatives volume—signals that crypto’s center of gravity has shifted decisively toward derivatives as the main trading venue. That shift can bring liquidity and tighter pricing, but it also raises the importance of:
- transparent risk metrics (open interest, funding rates, liquidation maps),
- resilient margin models during volatility,
- stronger guardrails against cross-platform contagion,
- and clearer rules for stablecoins and collateral quality.
The October deleveraging episode will likely shape how exchanges tune liquidation engines, how institutions size basis trades, and how regulators evaluate systemic risk in fast-moving digital-asset markets.
Record volume, real stress tests, and a more complex market
Crypto derivatives in 2025 became bigger, more institutional, and more connected to traditional finance—yet still capable of sudden, cascading liquidations. The next phase will likely focus less on raw growth and more on whether the market can scale risk controls to match trillion-dollar turnover, especially as ETFs, stablecoin regulation, and regulated derivatives products continue to expand.






