I recently came across a market data report that I found quite interesting. The landscape of contract trading is quietly changing, and competition among leading exchanges is becoming increasingly fierce.
Specifically looking at the data: the average daily contract trading volume remains at $25.2 billion, accounting for 9.5% of the global market share. What does this mean? Keep in mind that the entire market is in a bear phase, and most exchanges are experiencing shrinking trading volumes, yet this number still stays within the top three tiers.
What’s even more striking?
Even in a tough economic environment, such trading volume data indicates what—there is still real money in the market. Major institutions and retail investors haven't stopped bottom-fishing. Sufficient liquidity and high rankings reflect that funds are still actively seeking opportunities.
Maintaining this level of activity during a bear market suggests that the market’s rebound expectations haven't completely disappeared. The competition for market share among exchanges is essentially a contest over who can attract more active capital.
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StealthDeployer
· 2025-12-27 17:29
The bear market can still hold this number steady, indicating that those who are bottom-fishing have already started, retail investors are sinking, and funds are searching for the bottom.
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RebaseVictim
· 2025-12-26 19:57
Even in a bear market, the daily average remains at 25.2 billion, indicating that those bottom-fishing this time are really staying active. The market's sensitivity to capital is truly sharp.
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Ser_This_Is_A_Casino
· 2025-12-26 10:39
The bear market still maintains a daily trading volume of 25.2 billion yuan, indicating that there are indeed quite a few people bottom-fishing. This opportunity is truly tempting.
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StakeWhisperer
· 2025-12-25 05:29
$25.2 billion can still stabilize the market, indicating that institutions are secretly accumulating at the bottom.
Leading exchanges are competing fiercely, and everyone wants a piece of the liquidity.
When the rebound comes, you'll understand the significance of the current accumulation.
To put it simply, you still need to choose the right exchange; otherwise, insufficient liquidity is pointless.
This bear market has been more resilient than expected, and funds are not as pessimistic as they seem.
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DegenMcsleepless
· 2025-12-25 05:28
Can the bear market still be this strong? It shows that the institutions haven't stopped at all; they're all waiting for a rebound.
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SolidityStruggler
· 2025-12-25 05:23
The bear market can still maintain a 9.5% share, indicating that big players are indeed not idle, and their bottom-fishing efforts haven't stopped.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 2025-12-25 05:10
ngl that $25.2B daily volume thing hits different when you remember what happened in 2022... seen too many health factors tank when things *look* stable like this. just saying, watch those collateral ratios closely fr fr
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GasGuru
· 2025-12-25 05:06
Can the bear market still maintain this liquidity? It shows that institutions have been lurking for a long time, and retail investors need to keep up.
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252 billion yen trading volume remains in the top three, this data is quite impressive, exchanges are competing fiercely.
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I'm just worried that it's the institutions putting on a show; the real bottom-fishing hasn't started yet.
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Everyone wants a piece of the contract trading cake, but it depends on who can retain the big players' real money.
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The fact that the bear market maintains this heat actually sends one signal — the big players haven't given up at all.
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PanicSeller
· 2025-12-25 05:03
Hmm... $25.2 billion sounds pretty impressive, but I still feel like some people are still wildly harvesting profits.
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DoomCanister
· 2025-12-25 05:00
Bear markets can still be so good for bottom-fishing, which shows that big investors have a clear idea. It all depends on who can hold on until the rebound moment.
I recently came across a market data report that I found quite interesting. The landscape of contract trading is quietly changing, and competition among leading exchanges is becoming increasingly fierce.
Specifically looking at the data: the average daily contract trading volume remains at $25.2 billion, accounting for 9.5% of the global market share. What does this mean? Keep in mind that the entire market is in a bear phase, and most exchanges are experiencing shrinking trading volumes, yet this number still stays within the top three tiers.
What’s even more striking?
Even in a tough economic environment, such trading volume data indicates what—there is still real money in the market. Major institutions and retail investors haven't stopped bottom-fishing. Sufficient liquidity and high rankings reflect that funds are still actively seeking opportunities.
Maintaining this level of activity during a bear market suggests that the market’s rebound expectations haven't completely disappeared. The competition for market share among exchanges is essentially a contest over who can attract more active capital.