21Shares: Crypto’s “long game” starts as leverage resets and usage holds
Crypto just went through a rough few weeks — sharp price drops, tighter liquidity, and a lot of leverage getting rinsed out. In new research published Feb. 13, 21Shares frames the move as a necessary reset rather than a structural breakdown, arguing the core “plumbing” kept working even as speculative excess got cleared.
The firm’s central claim is simple: if the system were cracking, you’d expect usage and onchain economic activity to roll over. They say that didn’t happen — and that the post-shakeout market is starting to look more like a “conviction” arena, where fundamentals and real utility matter more than narratives.
Prices fell, but the networks kept getting used
21Shares points to a split that’s becoming more common in mature markets: price can drop hard while underlying activity holds up. In its read, sustained engagement strengthened across major chains even as many large-cap assets fell 30–50% over six weeks.
It also highlights protocol economics as a “stress test” indicator. Across the top 20 revenue-generating protocols, 21Shares says average daily revenue rose from about $35.6 million in January to $42.1 million in early February, with revenue floors holding above $30 million and a peak day hitting $77 million.
A volatility regime that looks less extreme than past cycles
The sell-off was ugly, but 21Shares argues it happened in a structurally calmer environment than prior crypto blowups. It notes a spike in short-term realized volatility during peak stress — but compares it to 2020’s COVID shock, when volatility reached much higher levels.
The broader point: crypto still gets hit by sudden shocks, but the market structure around it may be getting steadier over time, with realized volatility trending down across longer horizons since 2018.
Capital rotated — it didn’t vanish
In a true “capital flight” moment, stablecoin supply would tend to shrink as people redeem back into fiat. 21Shares says that didn’t occur in a sustained way. It notes stablecoin supply dipped only around 2% during peak stress and then recovered to roughly where it started over the window.
The other signal it emphasizes is stablecoin functionality under stress: pegs held and the rails kept running. 21Shares calls out roughly $1.9 trillion in USDT transfer volume over the past 30 days, including through peak volatility.
It also argues the composition of stablecoin activity shifted. Using USDC as an example, 21Shares says large institutional-sized transfers grew as a share of settlement volume during the stress window, while retail and smaller segments fell — a pattern it frames as rebalancing rather than abandonment.
A derivatives-led reset, not a spot-driven breakdown
On market structure, 21Shares says the unwind looked like a derivatives-led leverage reset. It highlights a sharp drop in bitcoin futures open interest during the stress window, and argues that funding-rate dislocations normalized quickly — suggesting the system was clearing risk rather than spiraling.
It also points to onchain liquidation infrastructure processing significant volume without the kind of lingering imbalances associated with fragile markets. The message: prices dropped, leverage cleared, but the pipes didn’t burst.
Headwinds: crypto isn’t the only “frontier” story anymore
21Shares doesn’t pretend the environment is all tailwinds. It argues the narrative gravity, capital, and talent in tech have shifted toward AI and other frontier verticals, raising the bar for crypto to prove immediate, real-world utility.
It also flags geopolitical and regulatory fragmentation as a persistent drag — pointing to China’s long-standing restrictions on bitcoin trading and mining, and warning that policy divergence can translate into structural demand constraints.
The “conviction” pitch: fewer easy narratives, more fundamentals
The punchline is that crypto is moving into a phase where durable value is built more slowly — through reliability, compliance, security, and unit economics. In that world, 21Shares argues, the edge comes from fundamentals rather than hype cycles.
It also ties the long-term setup to regulation: the firm says the U.S. is shifting away from “regulation by enforcement” toward clearer rules, and frames that as just as important as technological progress.
Why it matters for crypto
- It’s a clean “stress-test” argument: 21Shares says usage, stablecoin rails, and protocol revenue held up even as price and leverage snapped back.
- If the reset was derivatives-led, it suggests the market is getting better at clearing risk without forcing a full spot-driven capitulation.
- The piece captures a broader transition: fewer meme-driven narratives, more scrutiny on real businesses and real financial infrastructure.
- It also underlines the new competition for attention and capital — crypto now has to outperform AI and other sectors on tangible utility, not novelty.
What to watch next
- Whether stablecoin supply and settlement volumes keep holding up through the next volatility spike — that’s 21Shares’ key “capital flight” tell.
- ETF and institutional flow behavior if macro conditions worsen: rebalancing is one thing, persistent outflows are another.
- Whether realized volatility continues its longer-term downtrend — a major input into how allocators size risk.
- Concrete progress on U.S. market-structure legislation and regulatory clarity, which 21Shares frames as a major tailwind if it sticks.
Source: 21Shares Research – Conviction over speculation: The long game for Bitcoin and crypto begins