Answer: A long-squeeze cascade drove $1.9B crypto liquidations last week
Over $1.9 billion in leveraged crypto positions were liquidated in the past seven days. The pattern is consistent with a long-squeeze cascade, where crowded long positions are forced out as price slips through heavily margined levels, triggering exchange liquidations that amplify downside.
In derivatives structure terms, the wipeout reflects a rapid contraction in open interest as forced unwinds meet thinning liquidity. Funding and basis typically compress or flip during such cascades, signaling a reset in speculative leverage rather than a purely spot-led selloff. The magnitude aligns with figures cited in recent wipeout coverage by The Market Periodical, indicating the event sat among the more severe flushes seen in the current cycle.
A reset of positioning does not guarantee immediate recovery; it narrows near-term tail risk by clearing crowded longs while leaving the path dependent on subsequent flows and liquidity. Historically, these flushes can reduce fragility, but direction thereafter hinges on whether new leverage rebuilds or spot demand leads the tape.
Market impact: Bitcoin near $70K, sentiment reset, ETF flows (FBTC)
At the time of writing, Bitcoin was hovering around the $70,000 area, with derivatives metrics pointing to a sentiment reset and scope for stabilization as leverage clears; this aligns with reporting from Coinpaper, which also noted net U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF inflows of about $15.1 million on the day, led by the Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin ETF (FBTC) with approximately $12 million. That same coverage highlighted that a tranche of roughly $189 million in liquidations helped “reset” leverage, an illustrative snapshot of the week’s broader deleveraging impulse.
In practice, these flows provide context rather than a directional signal; modest net inflows alongside a leverage flush suggest cleaner positioning, while not precluding further volatility. Price holding near round numbers like $70,000 often concentrates liquidity and stops, so subsequent impulses, whether ETF flows, block trades, or fresh derivatives positioning, can move the market disproportionately in the short run.
Market technicians caution that liquidity depth around key levels matters after a cascade. “There are literally no liquidity clusters below at this moment,” said Ash Crypto, a market commentator, arguing the sweep resembled forced flushing rather than a routine correction.
What to watch: open interest, funding, liquidation heatmaps, CoinGlass
Open interest: The next clue is whether OI rebuilds as price stabilizes. A gradual OI rise alongside flat-to-muted funding can indicate healthier risk-taking, whereas a sharp OI spike with persistently positive funding may imply re-leveraging into resistance. A failure of OI to recover may signal lingering caution or a shift toward spot-led trading.
Funding and basis: After large liquidations, funding often normalizes or turns neutral/negative as longs unwind and shorts hesitate to press. Sustained neutral funding with compressing basis typically reflects a less crowded tape; a quick re-acceleration in positive funding, by contrast, can mark a renewed appetite for directional longs and potential fragility if the move stalls.
Liquidation heatmaps and liquidity concentrations: Post-cascade maps can reveal where the next clusters of forced orders sit. Based on dashboards from CoinGlass, monitoring the density of liquidation bands and resting liquidity above and below price helps gauge where a subsequent squeeze, long or short, could be triggered if momentum returns.
Institutional flows: ETF subscriptions and redemptions can confirm or offset derivatives signals. Consecutive net inflows to vehicles such as FBTC would indicate incremental spot demand supporting any stabilization, while outflows could leave the market more dependent on leveraged flows, raising the probability that positioning, not fundamentals, drives the next impulse.
| Disclaimer: The content on The CCPress is provided for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry inherent risks. Please consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. |
