The recent surge in trading activity on the crypto platform Bullish has propelled it into the top three centralized crypto exchanges by spot trading volume for the first time, surpassing the well-established Coinbase. According to CoinDesk Data’s February Exchange Review, Bullish experienced a remarkable 62.6% month-over-month increase in spot trading volumes, totaling $76 billion—the highest monthly total since October 2025. This growth allowed Bullish to capture a market share of 5.06%, up by 2.04 percentage points, positioning it as the third-largest centralized exchange in the sector.
Despite this significant achievement, the overall trading environment on centralized exchanges appears to be in decline. The combined spot and derivatives trading volumes fell by 2.41% in February, reaching $5.61 trillion—the lowest level recorded since October 2024. This downturn in activity coincided with reduced volatility in major cryptocurrencies. For most of the month, Bitcoin traded within a narrow range between $60,000 and $70, limiting the speculative behavior that typically drives higher volumes.
Within the broader market performance, spot trading accounted for $1.50 trillion of the total volume, marking a 3.01% decrease from January. In contrast, derivatives trading, though also down by 2.41% to $4.11 trillion, continued to dominate the trading landscape, comprising 73.2% of all activities on centralized exchanges.
While Binance retained its position as the market leader with a significant $331 billion in spot trading volume—representing approximately 22% market share—its dominance has waned, dropping to its lowest monthly level since October 2020. This decline suggests that trading activity is diversifying across various competing platforms.
The ascendance of Bullish demonstrates the evolving dynamics among centralized exchanges, particularly as they increase competitiveness on various fronts. Many exchanges are now focusing on enhancing liquidity, offering trading incentives, and introducing new products to engage traders during periods of sluggish market activity. Some exchanges have also forged partnerships with major U.S. stock exchanges to provide tokenized securities or have launched prediction market trading options, further diversifying their service offerings to attract users.

