A quiet accumulation trend rippled through Binance’s user base during May, as the exchange’s 43rd consecutive Proof of Reserves snapshot captured more Bitcoin and Ethereum held on the platform—even while the largest stablecoin slipped. The data, drawn from a June 1 snapshot, shows that user behavior isn’t simply about trading but about positioning for something longer-term, at a time when centralized exchange trust remains a live wire for the industry.
Binance released its latest attestation on Thursday, and the original report details a 4.26% increase in user BTC balances, rising by roughly 25,838 BTC to approximately 630,000 Bitcoin. Over the same period, user ETH vaults swelled 10.17%, adding 382,619 Ether to reach about 4.14 million ETH. Conversely, USDT holdings contracted 1.33%, shedding around 460 million USDT to land near 34.3 billion. That divergence tells its own story about how market participants are calibrating risk.
A Snap Judgement on Liquidity
The numbers aren’t an anomaly. They fit a broader pattern where crypto-native users, and perhaps some institutions, are quietly converting sidelined stablecoin capital into top-tier assets. May offered no obvious catalyst that would force a mass flight from dollars into crypto, but the drift is unmistakable. Bitcoin’s rally from the mid-$60,000 range earlier in the year gave way to choppy consolidation, and Ether, despite ETF anticipation, remained rangebound. Still, holdings rose—suggesting dip accumulation and a preference for self-custody-lite via a trusted exchange, or simply a bet that the next leg higher is worth the counterparty risk.
For Binance, the USDT drawdown isn’t necessarily a red flag. Some of that stablecoin may have exited for on-chain yield opportunities in DeFi, where lending protocols and RWA tokenization products are now competing aggressively for liquidity. The real-world asset market has crossed $20 billion in on-chain value , and yields are drawing capital away from passive stablecoin balances. That outflow might reflect less about distrust and more about capital efficiency.
Proof of Reserves as a Regulatory Pressure Point
Binance’s commitment to publishing these monthly snapshots—now in its 43rd iteration—is itself a reaction to the post-FTX settlement. Centralized exchanges that survived the 2022 collapse have had to operate under a new burden of proof, even in jurisdictions where no formal mandate exists. The attestations aren’t full audits, and they can’t capture off-chain liabilities or the exact nature of wallet control, but they provide a coarse filter. For market participants, the signal is simple: are user asset ratios shifting in ways that suggest stress, or are they trending normally? On this report, the answer points to normal accumulation.
Yet the backdrop is tense. In the United States, battle lines are being drawn over major crypto legislation that could redefine how exchanges custody assets and report reserves. If a bill like the one facing the Senate were to pass, exchanges would face stricter verification requirements, potentially weakening the voluntary PoR model that Binance champions. That regulatory friction, alongside ongoing SEC pressures, keeps exchange balance sheets under a microscope. For now, Binance’s willingness to keep publishing data—however incomplete—sets a floor under user confidence.
What the Reserves Don’t Say
There are limits to what a 1:1 reserve claim can illuminate. The report confirms that Binance holds enough BTC and ETH to cover customer liabilities, but it doesn’t reveal the composition of institutional vs. retail flows, the percentage of assets deployed in exchange-owned yield products, or the liquidity profile of those reserves across different trading venues. The concentration of Bitcoin in a handful of known Binance wallets remains a concern for some on-chain analysts, though it hasn’t triggered a detectable flight. The steady rise in proof-of-reserves commitment across the industry—from OKX to Crypto.com—suggests that users now factor these disclosures into their exchange-ranking calculus.
The drop in USDT may also reflect a subtle shift toward decentralized alternatives, or it could be a simple rebalancing ahead of an expected summer lull. But it’s worth noting that while the stablecoin drain was modest—1.33% of a massive base—it occurred during a month when overall crypto market capitalization was roughly flat. That implies selective repositioning rather than a broad cash-out. Meanwhile, blockchain developer activity is concentrating on a few key ecosystems , and exchanges are the gateway to those tokens. The more vibrant the development landscape, the more reason users have to keep assets on platforms where they can trade.
Binance remains the largest exchange by volume and user count, and its monthly PoR has become a fixture. But each snapshot now carries a dual narrative: a technical disclosure for analysts, and a barometer for sentiment. The June 1 data shows more conviction in the majors and less patience for stablecoin idling. That’s a posture markets haven’t seen with such clarity in months. Whether that turns into sustained upward pressure will depend on macro conditions and the regulatory path ahead—neither of which a reserve report can forecast.


