Quick Take
  • Cardano’s biggest problem right now is not ADA’s price, which is rising, but the DeFi economy beneath it, which is falling apart.
  • App-level fees, the revenue that DeFi protocols actually earn, dropped 67.1% over the past 30 days, even as the Cardano price gained about 3.6%.
  • A token can surge while the network built on it quietly empties out, and Cardano is doing exactly that.
  • ADA trades near $0.167, up roughly 3.6% on the month and still holding 18th by market value at about $6.2 billion.

What Happened

That combination is the story. A token can surge while the network built on it quietly empties out, and Cardano is doing exactly that.

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Even an Activity Burst Did Not Stick

Market Context

Cardano’s biggest problem right now is not ADA’s price, which is rising, but the DeFi economy beneath it, which is falling apart. App-level fees, the revenue that DeFi protocols actually earn, dropped 67.1% over the past 30 days, even as the Cardano price gained about 3.6%.

The Cardano Price Rises While the Apps Empty Out

ADA trades near $0.167, up roughly 3.6% on the month and still holding 18th by market value at about $6.2 billion. On the chart, the month looks fine.

Underneath, the picture reverses. The chain’s own gas fees fell 35.7% over 30 days, but the fees earned by DeFi apps fell almost twice as fast, down 67.1%. When app revenue drops faster than base-layer fees, users are leaving the applications, not just trading a softer token.

That extends a broader shrinking Cardano ecosystem, where deposits and trading have thinned through 2026 even as ADA’s market price has held up.

Transaction counts and DeFi health are not the same thing, and much of Cardano’s steady volume is simple transfers, staking, and batched swap orders. The value did not follow the activity either.

The root cause is liquidity. Cardano’s entire stablecoin supply sits near $59 million, a figure that looks like a rounding error beside its peers.

Avalanche, a smaller chain by activity, carries about $1.4 billion. Solana holds roughly $15 billion, and Tron 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.

On Solana, about $15.4 billion in stablecoins circulates against roughly $5.0 billion locked in DeFi. This means stablecoins outnumber DeFi deposits by about three to one. Most of those dollars are used across the wider economy, not just parked in apps, which is what a deep market looks like.

Cardano is the reverse. Its whole stablecoin supply, near $59 million, is so thin that those coins already make up most of the dollars in its roughly $73 million DeFi pool. There is barely any free-floating stablecoin liquidity for apps to tap, a gap the network’s DeFi ecosystem has never closed, even with flagship stablecoin efforts like Djed.

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 reasons for the exit, from regulation to developers leaving, will need separate reporting.

The post Cardano Price Climbs, but Its DeFi Engine Is Quietly Collapsing appeared first on BeInCrypto.

Why It Matters

On-chain data shows the drain is not for lack of use. Cardano still settles roughly 150,000 to 180,000 transactions a week, and in early June that count jumped about 50% to 271,000, driven by a burst of DEX swaps across Minswap, WingRiders, and SundaeSwap.

Even through the June surge, Minswap’s total value locked fell about 22% over the month, per DefiLlama. The chain was busy, but the money left.

Details

A Stablecoin Base That Barely Registers

To see the imbalance, separate two numbers. Total value locked counts only the money parked inside DeFi apps. Stablecoin supply counts every stablecoin on the chain, including coins sitting in wallets, on exchanges, and in payments.