Stablecoins are being compared with the combined size of Layer-1 blockchains and decentralized finance, a framing that resonates because these tokens underpin much of on-chain activity. The comparison is directionally plausible on an order-of-magnitude basis, but it mixes distinct metrics and requires careful scoping to avoid double counting.
For clarity in this analysis, stablecoin market cap refers to the circulating supply of fiat-referenced or overcollateralized stablecoins; DeFi TVL refers to value locked in smart contracts; and Layer-1 blockchain market cap refers to the equity-like valuation of base-layer native tokens. Each metric captures different forms of economic weight in crypto.
Verdict: Stablecoins roughly equal L1s + DeFi, with caveats
On a like-for-like, order-of-magnitude view, stablecoin market cap is roughly comparable to the sum of selected Layer-1 blockchain market cap plus DeFi TVL at certain snapshots. The exact ratio varies with methodology, the inclusion or exclusion of assets like Bitcoin, and time-of-sample effects.
Comparing a stock metric (market capitalization) to TVL (a balance of assets committed to protocols) can be informative but is not perfectly apples-to-apples. The mix of stablecoins inside DeFi pools further complicates the picture, as those dollars would otherwise be counted in stablecoin market cap, creating potential double counting if not adjusted.
Methodology: stablecoin market cap vs DeFi TVL vs Layer-1 blockchain market cap
Stablecoin market cap is evaluated as the circulating supply of major fiat-referenced tokens and overcollateralized designs, multiplied by par, with cross-checks against issuer transparency pages; market trackers such as CoinGecko are suitable for snapshotting the aggregate. DeFi TVL is taken from protocol- and chain-level trackers such as DefiLlama, recognizing that TVL can reflect bridged assets and stablecoin collateral, which should not be simultaneously counted toward stablecoin market cap in the same comparison frame.
Layer-1 blockchain market cap is measured as the free-float market capitalization of base-layer smart contract platforms, as cataloged by CoinGecko; this scope excludes Layer-2s, appchains, staking derivatives, and wrapped representations to mitigate double counting. To align units, comparisons should fix a single timestamp, exclude Bitcoin when focusing on smart contract platforms, and normalize for stablecoin balances already embedded in DeFi TVL.
As a magnitude check, a late-2025 sector snapshot placed the aggregate size of stablecoins near the high hundreds of billions. As reported in a sector study, “the total stablecoin market capitalization reached $298 billion,” said Amina Bank.
Stablecoins’ role in DeFi liquidity, trading flows, and chain distribution
In practice, stablecoins function as the dominant quote and settlement asset across decentralized exchanges and money markets, concentrating liquidity and reducing basis risk for traders. Their presence in lending pools and automated market makers anchors pricing and facilitates risk transfer without repeated conversion to bank rails.
Linkages between stablecoin supply and DeFi TVL are observable at the flow level: according to Qubit Capital, stablecoin inflows have served as leading indicators of subsequent changes in DeFi TVL, consistent with the view that dollar liquidity primes protocol growth. This relationship is contingent on market conditions and can invert during deleveraging phases when TVL contracts despite stablecoin supply stability.
Distribution across chains evolves with fee conditions, yield opportunities, and bridge reliability. Concentration can shift toward ecosystems that minimize slippage and offer deep pools in core pairs, while fragmentation increases operational risks, including bridge-specific custody exposures and the possibility of counting the same dollars more than once across mirrored positions.
At the time of this writing, and for neutral market context only, Coinbase Global, Inc. (COIN) last traded at $164.32 at the close and $164.81 after hours (+0.30%), with a day’s range of $146.16–$167.65, based on Nasdaq real-time data. These figures do not bear on the methodology above but illustrate broader market conditions under which on-chain liquidity preferences can change.
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