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    Crypto equities gained 23% while crypto tokens fell 36% this year

    Bitwise reported that publicly traded crypto companies gained 23% in the first half of 2026, while crypto assets fell 36%, creating a 59-percentage-point gap.

    Equities could be pricing in a recovery that sits above where the tokens currently trade, or they could also be capturing revenue crypto adoption generates for companies through fees, yield, and services that exist whether tokens rise, fall, or sit still.

    Across recent crypto cycles, crypto equities and major tokens have generally moved in the same direction. When Bitcoin and other large-cap assets rallied, exchanges earned more, miners expanded, venture funding returned, and much of the industry benefited.

    Whether that link still holds is one of the points Bitwise’s report raised.

    Crypto equities rose while crypto assets fell in H1 2026Crypto equities rose while crypto assets fell in H1 2026
    Bar chart showing crypto equities gained 23% in H1 2026 while crypto assets fell 36%, creating a 59-percentage-point gap.

    What the equity basket is made of

    Bitwise’s crypto-equity theme (BITQ) recently listed Coinbase, Strategy, IREN, BitMine, MARA, Galaxy, Figure, Cipher, Hut 8, and Riot among its top holdings.

    That mix spans fee-based platforms, Bitcoin treasury companies, and miners whose valuations remain highly sensitive to BTC, so the 23% gain compresses several distinct exposures into one figure.

    Stablecoins make the clearest case, as DeFiLlama puts the total stablecoin market cap near $310 billion, with Tether earning roughly $482 million and Circle roughly $193 million in 30-day revenue, mostly from yield on the assets backing their tokens.

    Circle’s numbers showed $653 million in reserve income last quarter, up 17% year over year, and the company just received final OCC approval to run a national trust bank.

    That revenue arrives whether the person spending a stablecoin ever buys a volatile crypto asset as an investment.

    Coinbase’s retail derivatives revenue topped $200 million annualized in the first quarter, and its prediction market business passed $100 million annualized within two months of its US launch.

    Robinhood’s total net revenue grew 15% year over year to $1.07 billion in the first quarter even as crypto transaction revenue fell 47% to $134 million. Options, equities, net interest income, and $147 million in other transaction revenue, primarily from event contracts, offset the decline; customers traded a record 8.8 billion event contracts during the quarter.

    TeraWulf offers the clearest version outside trading altogether, as the firm signed a 20-year data-center lease with Anthropic worth an estimated $19 billion in contracted revenue, a deal that has little to do with whether Bitcoin’s price recovers.

    Growth area Who captures revenue first? Revenue source Does the token need to rise?
    Stablecoins Issuers, reserve managers, payment firms Reserve yield, payment fees, distribution No
    Exchanges Public companies, market makers, custodians Trading fees, spreads, subscriptions, custody Not necessarily
    Prediction markets Platforms, exchanges, liquidity providers Fees, spreads, event-contract volume No
    Tokenization Issuers, custodians, transfer agents, infrastructure firms Issuance, servicing, custody, settlement Only if token captures fees
    Mining / AI data centers Public miners, power-site owners, AI customers Hosting revenue, leases, compute contracts No
    Ethereum / Hyperliquid-style tokens Token holders, validators, protocol funds Fee burn, staking yield, buybacks Yes, if mechanism works

    The mechanisms that give tokens a claim

    Ethereum burns a portion of every transaction fee, directly tying network usage to a shrinking token supply, and Hyperliquid routes most of its fees into a fund that buys back its token.

    Those mechanisms create a pathway for network activity to affect token supply or demand. Stablecoins generally do not pass reserve income to holders, whereas exchange shareholders capture the company’s economics through equity rather than through a protocol token.

    The numbers for the second quarter also complicate a purely bearish read, with Bitwise’s Crypto Innovators 30 Index climbing 30.6% in the quarter.

    Its large-cap crypto index fell 15.4% over that same period, and prediction market volume hit $43.2 billion with tokenized real-world assets climbing toward $33 billion.

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