What’s the deal with stablecoins? They’re not just a safety valve; they’re the liquidity magnets that never seem to stop, even when the rest of the game looks like it’s stuck in traffic. The real signal isn’t some theory about crypto utility; it’s how much cash is pouring in, and where that money is rotating. The next leg higher? It’s not in the lab, it’s in your wallet.
January made this clear.
Even with heavy FUD weighing on large-cap assets and Bitcoin [BTC] posting a -10.17% ROI, its worst since 2022, stablecoin liquidity kept building, pushing total flows to a record $10 trillion.

To put that into perspective, last year’s entire stablecoin volume was $33 trillion, meaning nearly one-third of that activity happened in just 30 days. Digging deeper, Circle’s USDC alone processed $8.4 trillion in January.
Meanwhile, Tether (USDT) added $1.8 trillion, while Dai (DAI) contributed $58.1 billion.
Taken together, these stablecoin flows point to sustained on-chain liquidity, even as the market remained firmly in a risk-off mode.
Naturally, the question arises: Does this divergence between stablecoin flows and price volatility signal “undervaluation,” and will this liquidity become the launchpad for the next move when the market flips risk-on?
Stablecoin liquidity-from safety to utility, with a side of irony
No doubt, a $10 trillion stablecoin volume in January alone, despite a risk-off market, shows investors moving into stablecoins for safety, hedging as most digital assets slipped below previous highs. Or maybe they just like the sound of “stable” while everything else is wobbling.
That said, a divergence stands out. Circle minted $10.5 billion USDC on Solana [SOL] in January, tracking with an 8% bump in Real-World Assets (RWA) TVL, adding roughly $100 million to a new record of $1.19 billion.
Notably, across the broader RWA market, the trend was even bigger.
Inflows jumped 18%, adding about $3.7 billion to push total RWA TVL to an all-time high of $24.19 billion, making it the standout sector for the month.

Put simply, stablecoin flows are driving productive on-chain activity.
The result? SOL saw increased structural demand, landing Solana as the fourth top-performing chain in January, with $490 billion in transaction volume, even as SOL dropped 16% over the month.
In this context, crypto’s “undervaluation” is becoming apparent.
Meanwhile, Y Combinator’s move to allow funding via stablecoins further cements the shift from safety to utility, making January’s $10 trillion milestone a strong signal for a rebound once the market flips back risk-on.
Final Thoughts
- January’s stablecoin flows, record USDC minting, and an all-time high RWA TVL show capital actively moving on-chain despite a risk-off market.
- Solana’s transaction volume, combined with Y Combinator’s move, reinforces how liquidity is building a base for the next risk-on market move.
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2026-02-04 12:13