Cardano's ADA is climbing while the DeFi economy on top of it is quietly emptying out.
Cardano's ADA is climbing while the DeFi economy on top of it is quietly emptying out.

Cardano's ADA is climbing while the DeFi economy on top of it is quietly emptying out.
Cardano's ADA gained 3.6% over the past 30 days to trade near $0.167, even as app-level fees across its DeFi protocols dropped 67.1%, data from DefiLlama shows. The token holds 18th by market value at about $6.2 billion.
The divergence between token price and on-chain activity is unusually wide. The chain's own gas fees fell 35.7% over the same period, meaning DeFi app revenue declined nearly twice as fast as base-layer transaction costs, per DefiLlama. When app revenue drops faster than base-layer fees, users are leaving the applications, not just trading a softer token.
Cardano settles roughly 150,000 to 180,000 transactions a week. A burst of DEX swaps across Minswap, WingRiders and SundaeSwap pushed that count 50% higher to 271,000 in early June, yet Minswap's total value locked fell 22% over the month, DefiLlama data shows. The chain was busy, but the money left.
The root cause is a stablecoin shortage. Cardano's entire stablecoin supply sits near $59 million, a fraction of the $1.4 billion on Avalanche or $15 billion on Solana. Tron holds more than $89 billion, about 1,500 times Cardano's base. Stablecoins are the working capital of DeFi, and without a deep dollar pool, lending and trading cannot scale.
A Liquidity Gap That Stifles Growth
Cardano's DeFi total value locked stands at roughly $73 million, meaning its stablecoin supply already makes up most of the dollars in its DeFi pool. On Solana, about $15.4 billion in stablecoins circulates against roughly $5 billion locked in DeFi — a three-to-one ratio that provides ample free-floating liquidity for apps to tap.
The imbalance means Cardano's DeFi protocols lack the working capital to support meaningful lending, borrowing or trading volume. Even as ADA's market price held up through 2026, deposits and trading have thinned, extending a broader contraction in the network's on-chain economy.
For now, the fix is liquidity, not price. ADA can keep climbing, but until real stablecoin depth arrives, Cardano's DeFi engine has almost nothing to run on. The next catalyst to watch is any major stablecoin deployment on the network — without it, the divergence between price and on-chain activity is likely to persist or widen.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.