Total deposits across major DeFi lending protocols have dropped from $125 billion to $79.6 billion since October 2025, a $45.4 billion decline in roughly five monthsTotal deposits across major DeFi lending protocols have dropped from $125 billion to $79.6 billion since October 2025, a $45.4 billion decline in roughly five months

DeFi Lending Deposits Have Fallen 36% Since October – Five Protocols Account for Almost All of It

2026/03/15 11:12
3 min read
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Total deposits across major DeFi lending protocols have dropped from $125 billion to $79.6 billion since October 2025, a $45.4 billion decline in roughly five months, according to Artemis data.

What the Chart Shows

The Artemis lending deposits chart covers October 2023 through early 2026, tracking total deposits by protocol in a stacked bar format. The purple Aave layer dominates the visual throughout, reflecting its position as the largest lending protocol by a significant margin. The chart peaked near $150 billion in late 2025, coinciding with Bitcoin’s all-time high above $126,000, before declining steadily into early 2026.

The current reading near $79.6 billion sits roughly at the same level as mid-2025, erasing several months of deposit growth in a relatively short period. The non-Aave layers, Spark in orange, Compound in green, Euler, Fluid, and others, have held more stable in absolute terms. The visual compression in the chart is almost entirely driven by the purple Aave layer contracting.

Where the $45 Billion Went

Five protocols account for $40 billion of the $45.4 billion total decline. Aave lost $27.6 billion, representing 61% of the entire market drawdown on its own. Spark lost $5.4 billion. Euler dropped $2.6 billion. Fluid fell $2.4 billion. Compound declined $2 billion. The remaining $5.4 billion in losses was distributed across all other protocols combined.

The concentration of the decline in Aave is both a reflection of its market dominance and a signal about where leveraged demand was most concentrated during the bull run. Aave’s deposit base grew most aggressively as crypto prices climbed because it is the primary venue for borrowing against crypto collateral to deploy into yield strategies. When prices fall and collateral values decline, those positions unwind and deposits leave.

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What Declining Lending Deposits Signal

DeFi lending deposits represent capital that has been committed to on-chain financial infrastructure for productive use, either as collateral for loans or as supplied liquidity earning yield. A 36% decline signals that participants are reducing leverage, withdrawing collateral, and stepping back from yield strategies rather than adding new positions.

That behaviour is consistent with the broader picture reported throughout this week. USDT is leaving exchanges at a record rate. Stablecoin netflows to exchanges have been negative since the start of 2026. Bitcoin supply on exchanges has fallen to its lowest level since 2017. Capital is moving away from active deployment across every metric simultaneously.

The DeFi lending decline adds another dimension. It is not just exchange-side liquidity leaving. Protocol-level lending activity, the infrastructure that enables on-chain leverage and yield farming, is contracting in parallel. The $45 billion reduction in lending deposits represents a meaningful compression in the leverage available to support crypto price action from the demand side.

Whether that compression reflects permanent capital exit or temporary risk reduction ahead of redeployment is the question the deposit data cannot resolve. What it confirms is that DeFi’s participation in the bull market has unwound significantly since the October peak.

The post DeFi Lending Deposits Have Fallen 36% Since October – Five Protocols Account for Almost All of It appeared first on ETHNews.

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