Crypto News Today: Binance Captures Nearly 30% of Global Crypto Derivatives Volume in Record $86T Year
Global crypto derivatives trading surged to record levels in 2025, underscoring the market’s rapid institutionalization and growing complexity. Total derivatives volume reached $85.7 trillion, averaging $265 billion per day, according to new data from CoinGlass.The report highlights Binance’s continued dominance, the rising role of institutional hedging, and heightened systemic risks exposed by major liquidation events.Binance Captures Nearly 30% of Global Derivatives VolumeBinance remained the clear leader in crypto derivatives trading, processing $25.09 trillion in cumulative volume during 2025 — roughly 29.3% of all global derivatives activity.In practical terms, nearly $30 out of every $100 traded worldwide flowed through Binance, reinforcing its position as the industry’s primary liquidity hub.Each recorded between $8.2 trillion and $10.8 trillion in annual derivatives volume. Combined, these four platforms accounted for 62.3% of total global market share, illustrating a high level of concentration among top venues.Institutional Channels Drive Structural GrowthCoinGlass noted that derivatives growth in 2025 was increasingly driven by institutional pathways, including:Spot crypto ETFsOptions marketsCompliant futures productsThis shift helped accelerate activity on Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), which had already overtaken Binance in Bitcoin futures open interest in 2024 and further solidified its role in 2025.The derivatives market has steadily moved away from a purely retail-driven, high-leverage boom-and-bust model toward a more sophisticated mix of hedging, basis trading, and ETF-linked strategies.Open Interest Swings Reveal Rising Systemic RiskDespite explosive trading volumes, derivatives positioning remained volatile throughout the year.Global open interest fell to a 2025 low of ~$87 billion after Q1 deleveragingIt then surged to an all-time high of $235.9 billion on Oct. 7A sharp reset in early Q4 erased over $70 billion, roughly one-third of total open interest, in a rapid deleveraging eventEven after that shakeout, year-end open interest stood at $145.1 billion, still 17% higher than at the start of the year, highlighting the market’s growing scale despite repeated stress events.October Liquidation Shock Exposes Market “Plumbing” RisksThe most severe stress test arrived in early October. CoinGlass estimates total forced liquidations in 2025 at approximately $150 billion, with a significant portion concentrated over just two days.On Oct. 10 and Oct. 11, liquidations exceeded $19 billion, with 85%–90% coming from long positions, as traders betting on higher prices were rapidly wiped out.CoinGlass linked the crash to heightened macro risk following trade policy headlines, including Donald Trump’s announcement of 100% tariffs on Chinese imports, which pushed markets into a sharp “risk-off” regime.Derivatives Market Grows More Complex — and More FragileCoinGlass warned that while derivatives markets have matured, they have also become more interconnected and fragile.“Extreme events that erupted during 2025 imposed stress tests of unprecedented scale on existing margin mechanisms, liquidation rules, and cross-platform risk transmission pathways,” the report stated.Deeper leverage chains, tighter correlations, and faster cross-exchange contagion mean that while liquidity has expanded, tail risks have grown alongside it.Outlook: Bigger Market, Higher Stakes in 2026The $86 trillion surge in crypto derivatives volume marks a milestone for the industry, reflecting its evolution into a global financial market with institutional depth. At the same time, repeated liquidation shocks underscore the need for improved risk controls as leverage, complexity, and capital continue to scale.As crypto heads into 2026, derivatives will remain central to price discovery — but also the primary channel through which volatility and systemic stress propagate.