- Swyftx’s fourth quarterly Industry Report, published July 8, found trading volumes across global exchanges at some of their lowest levels since 2023, with total crypto market capitalisation down 12% over the quarter.
- Hyperliquid rose 75% across Q2 according to the report, while tokenised private credit passed US$6 billion (AU$8.64 billion) on-chain and Coinbase launched its CUSHY credit fund on April 30.
- Self-managed super fund investors on Swyftx recorded their highest buy/sell ratio in the report’s history, up 90% quarter-on-quarter against 1.2/1 for the exchange’s broader customer base.
Swyftx’s Q2 2026 Industry Report, published July 8, found trading volumes across global exchanges at some of their lowest levels since 2023, while arguing that institutional infrastructure building, stablecoin payment integrations and on-chain debt issuance signal structural growth beneath the weak price action.
The report is the Australian exchange’s fourth quarterly edition. Swyftx lead analyst Pav Hundal wrote the review of the quarter’s macroeconomic pressures, with contributions from market analysts David Bird and Sam Green, and the exchange’s own platform data supplied the customer figures.
Total crypto market capitalisation fell 12% over the quarter, according to the report.
Related: Swyftx Secures Financial Services Licence, Paving the Way for Expanded Payments Offering
Hyperliquid Defies the Slump
Hyperliquid rose 75% between the start and end of Q2 against that 12% market decline, the report found, setting several record prices and debuting exchange-traded HYPE products in the United States.
Moreover, tokenised private credit also built momentum, with more than US$6 billion (AU$8.64 billion) distributed on-chain by the end of the quarter, a fraction of an addressable market the report put in the trillions.
Swyftx singled out Coinbase’s April 30 launch of CUSHY, an institutional credit fund running largely on stablecoin rails. The fund, formally known as the Coinbase Stablecoin Credit Strategy, offers tokenised shares on Solana and Ethereum for qualified investors, with Northern Trust serving as administrator.
Additionally, Self-managed super fund investors stood out in Swyftx’s platform data, recording their highest buy/sell ratio in the history of the reports, up 90% quarter-on-quarter, against 1.2/1 for the broader customer base.
Millennials At It Again
Millennials remained the exchange’s most active generation for a fourth consecutive report, lifting their share of unique orders to a record, while Gen X posted the steepest pullback of any cohort for a second straight quarter. Gen Z kept closing the gap on both as younger traders move further into their careers, the report noted.
Swyftx’s modelling found stablecoin transfers could cut cross-border payment costs by 80% to 90% for the growing pool of AI-powered freelancers, taking a solo operator processing US$5,000 (AU$7,200) a month from roughly US$3,800 (AU$5,472) a year in fees to under US$500 (AU$720).
The report cited US Census Bureau data putting AI-assisted solo businesses at six to ten million globally, a figure projected to near 17 million within the decade.
Related: Strategy Sells $216M in Bitcoin, Breaking Saylor’s ‘Never Sell’ Creed
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