April 26, 2026 ChainGPT

Crypto Slump Squeezes Households: 36% Cut Spending, Crypto Banking Demand Rises

Crypto Slump Squeezes Households: 36% Cut Spending, Crypto Banking Demand Rises
Crypto slump is squeezing household budgets, new survey finds A fresh CEX.IO survey of 1,100 active U.S. users shows the current crypto downturn is forcing many traders to tighten their belts. Key takeaways: - 36% of respondents say they have cut everyday spending because of market losses. - 10% report making major sacrifices to preserve their crypto positions. - 37% delayed or cancelled purchases after crypto losses; 21% postponed big financial plans like buying a home, a car or starting renovations. - Bitcoin sits roughly 40% below its October 2025 high, leaving many retail traders with unrealized losses—though CEX.IO notes the 2025–2026 bear market “has not produced the kind of systemic shock seen in past cycles,” with the effects showing up more quietly at the household level. The survey also highlights how cryptocurrency exposure is being handled privately at home: only 5% of respondents said someone else knows the full value and size of their crypto holdings, while most either share limited details or keep their positions entirely private. On cash flow and financial stress: - 77% said they did not take on debt tied to crypto, but 38% reported some financial disruption since October 2025. Despite the squeeze, long-term attitudes remain relatively resilient: - 73% said their income strategy around crypto has not changed. - Nearly half of respondents said crypto makes up more than 30% of their investable assets. - 79% plan to hold or increase their crypto positions over the next six months. Separately, a Börse Stuttgart Digital poll of about 6,000 investors in Germany, Italy, Spain and France found rising demand for crypto-friendly banking: roughly 35% would consider switching banks for better crypto services, and nearly one in five expect their primary bank to offer crypto access within three years. Bottom line: while this market cycle may be less catastrophic than past ones, losses are having tangible, often private effects on household finances—and demand for crypto-enabled banking services appears to be growing in Europe. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news