CryptoQuant Flags $863M Nexo Loans As Confidence Holds In Pullback
CryptoQuant data shows Nexo users borrowed nearly 1 billion dollars in a year and over 30% returned, suggesting managed deleveraging as Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana retreat.
Summary
- CryptoQuant’s JA Maartun reports Nexo issued about 863 million dollars in credit, with users borrowing nearly 1 billion dollars from January 2025 to January 2026.
- Over 30% of Nexo users returned during the drawdown, a pattern analysts frame as risk being trimmed rather than a panic liquidation event.
- The flows come as Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana trade as high‑beta macro risk proxies, with crypto still closely tracking U.S. equity sentiment.
Crypto lending platform Nexo has quietly become a barometer of risk appetite in digital assets, even as markets digest a bruising pullback. In new on‑chain analysis published by CryptoQuant, researcher JA Maartun highlights that “data from Nexo shows: $863 million in total credit issued,” with users borrowing “nearly $1 billion” between January 2025 and January 2026. Crucially, “over 30% of users returned,” a dynamic Maartun frames as stability rather than stress during the drawdown. Full details are available in CryptoQuant’s “Stability During a Market Pullback>”
Market commentators argue those flows signal that leverage is being trimmed, not liquidated in panic. “Nearly $1B borrowed during a pullback says confidence didn’t fully leave the room,” Dutch outlet CryptoJournaal wrote, adding that “30% returning shows some deleveraging, but not a rush for the exits. Feels more like managed risk than stress.” That view echoes broader desks that describe crypto as the “purest expression of macro risk appetite,” with large‑caps still trading as high‑beta satellites to U.S. equities.
It comes digital assets continue to trade as the purest expression of macro risk appetite. Bitcoin (BTC) is hovering around $68,700, with a 24‑hour range roughly between $68,000 and $70,500 and spot turnover near $37.5B. Ethereum (ETH) changes hands close to $1,985, after printing a 24‑hour high just above $2,000 and a low near $1,930, on about $24.5B in volume. Solana (SOL) trades in the mid‑$80s, last seen near $85–$86, down around 4% on the day with roughly $9–10B changing hands.
Nexo’s role in that ecosystem has grown since it launched what it called the world’s first crypto‑backed payment card with Mastercard, allowing users to spend against collateral without selling their holdings. At the same time, the lender remains under regulatory scrutiny, facing a recent fine in California over unlicensed lending practices. That mix of growth, leverage and oversight helps explain why on‑chain credit data from platforms like Nexo now sits at the center of every serious macro‑crypto conversation.
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