Key Highlights
- Weekly stablecoin inflows reached $1.7 billion, representing a significant surge in capital deployment.
- Messari data showed a 414.5% weekly increase in net stablecoin inflows versus the prior seven-day period.
- Daily inflows averaged $162.5 million over 30 days, pushing the monthly average into positive range.
- Blockchain networks processed 6.3% more transaction volume during this timeframe.
- Smaller transaction sizes suggested growing retail user engagement across networks.
Dollar-pegged token markets experienced renewed momentum last week as capital flooded into stablecoin networks while Washington policymakers sparred over proposed yield limitations. Messari tracked substantial growth in weekly net inflows alongside rising blockchain transactions. Meanwhile, disagreements surrounding yield-generating stablecoins created roadblocks for pending cryptocurrency legislation.
Capital Floods Back Into Stablecoin Markets
According to Messari’s latest data, net stablecoin inflows climbed to $1.7 billion for the week, delivering a 414.5% jump compared to the previous seven-day window. This marked a notable turnaround following periods when redemptions exceeded new issuance across primary networks.
Net inflows track newly minted tokens minus those redeemed, serving as a gauge for fresh capital entering cryptocurrency ecosystems. Throughout the most recent 30-day span, daily inflows averaged $162.5 million, reversing the monthly metric into positive ground.
Two weeks prior to this recovery, Messari documented weekly inflows totaling $249 million, signaling a more modest issuance rate. During the 30-day window ending Feb. 18, markets experienced $4.4 billion in net outflows, creating headwinds for overall activity.
Blockchain infrastructure handled elevated volumes as transaction counts expanded throughout this same window. Weekly transaction volumes jumped 6.3%, signaling heightened utilization across stablecoin payment rails.
Messari’s analysis revealed declining average transaction values during the period, pointing toward expanded retail user involvement. The research firm noted that reduced transfer amounts indicated growing participation from everyday users compared to institutional players.
The research connected elevated network utilization directly to recovering stablecoin minting activity. Higher onchain movement patterns corresponded with the restoration of positive net issuance flows.
Congressional Yield Controversy Blocks Legislative Progress
Policymakers escalated debates regarding whether stablecoin issuers should provide yield payments to token holders. Traditional banking organizations contended that interest-bearing tokens might siphon deposits from conventional financial institutions.
Crypto industry advocates pressed legislators to implement yield payment restrictions while negotiating comprehensive digital asset market structure legislation. These groups emphasized that defined boundaries would eliminate regulatory uncertainties and safeguard established banking entities.
The Senate Banking Committee originally planned a markup session for the legislation during mid-January. Disagreements concerning yield-related provisions compelled legislators to delay the session without setting a new date, based on committee communications.





