FUD hit the crypto market in the second quarter after a massive shakeout in TVL.
Notably, this wasn’t just the result of weaker price action. Instead, back-to-back protocol exploits resulted in more than $600 million in cumulative losses, leading to widespread capital outflows as users rushed to unload assets and reduce their exposure to DeFi protocols.
To put the magnitude of the pullback into perspective, more than $20 billion exited DeFi protocols during the quarter, reducing total locked value (TVL) to approximately $70 billion, down from the pre-October 2025 high of approximately $150 billion. That represents the sharpest quarter-on-quarter decline in TVL since 2021, underscoring how quickly market participants shifted to a risk-averse stance.

Aaf [AAVE]the largest credit protocol, was a good example of this trend.
As AMBCrypto reported, after the KelpDAO exploit, Aave’s TVL dropped about 18% to $17.8 billion within 24 hours as users quickly drained liquidity from the protocol. The sellout wasn’t limited to Aave, however. Fear quickly spread across DeFi, driving liquidity out of other protocols and causing Ethereum’s TVL to drop by more than $10 billion.
Now, however, the trend may be starting to reverse. Aave on Ethereum recently registered 1,806 new wallet addresses in one day, the strongest network growth since October 2021. While one day of data isn’t enough to confirm a recovery, it does suggest that interest in DeFi is growing again.
The question, of course, is: Is this the first sign that the market is bottoming ahead of a possible third-quarter rally?
DeFi is rebounding as stablecoin inflows signal returning risk appetite
Stablecoins are often one of the clearest indicators of where capital flows.
It is striking that this trend already manifested itself in the third quarter. Stablecoin liquidity has increased in several major L1 networks. Solana ended the second quarter of 2026 with a record $16.6 billion stablecoin offering. Stellar also saw momentum increase, with 30-day stablecoin transfer volume rising 32.6%. Cardano shows a similar pattern. According to DefiLlama, the network’s native stablecoin supply has grown by more than 20% in the past week.
Taken together, these statistics paint a clear picture. Stablecoins are going back on-chain, TVL is starting to recover and activity in the major DeFi protocols is increasing. This view receives further support from CryptoQuant’s latest report, which showed CeFi loans fell 6% quarter-on-quarter to $23.3 billion, the first decline since Q3 2024.

The takeaway is fairly simple.
As activity on centralized lending platforms has declined, liquidity appears to be making its way back into DeFi, indicating that investors are increasingly comfortable deploying capital on-chain.
If this rotation from CeFi to DeFi continues, it could be one of the first measurable signs that risk sentiment is fading in the second quarter, potentially laying the groundwork for a broader crypto recovery in the third quarter.
Final summary
- DeFi is showing signs of recovery as stablecoin inflows increase and Aave network activity recovers.
- Falling CeFi lending and rising on-chain liquidity suggested that capital could flow back into DeFi before the third quarter.

