$180M in crypto shorts liquidated in just 30 minutes as massive squeeze hits
A brutal short squeeze wiped out bearish bets across the crypto market, with Bitcoin leading a sharp price reversal that caught leveraged traders off guard.
Roughly $180 million in short positions evaporated from the crypto market in a 30-minute window on May 23, as a violent price spike turned bearish bets into expensive lessons. The event, best described as a textbook short squeeze, punished traders who had been betting on further downside.
How $180M vanished in half an hour
When traders open short positions using leverage, they’re essentially borrowing assets to sell them at the current price, hoping to buy them back cheaper later and pocket the difference. If the price moves against them, their exchange forces a liquidation to prevent further losses. The higher the leverage, the smaller the price move needed to trigger that forced closure.
What happened on May 23 was a cascade. Bitcoin began climbing rapidly, and the concentration of leveraged short positions created the perfect conditions for a chain reaction. As the first wave of shorts got liquidated, the buying pressure from those forced closures pushed the price higher still, dragging the next tier of shorts into liquidation territory.
Data from Coinglass, which tracks liquidation clusters across major futures exchanges, showed the buildup of leverage heading into this event was substantial.
The $180 million figure represents just the 30-minute window. Liquidation figures in the preceding 24 hours had already reached into the hundreds of millions, suggesting the market was a pressure cooker well before the lid blew off.
The short squeeze playbook
Bitcoin’s price action in 2026 has been a rollercoaster that even seasoned traders might find nauseating. The market saw dips below $75,000 earlier in the year followed by sharp rebounds, creating an environment where conviction in either direction could get expensive quickly.
What this means for traders watching the market
For anyone actively trading crypto, the lesson is straightforward but bears repeating: leverage is a double-edged sword with a very short handle. The $180 million in liquidations didn’t come from spot sellers who simply held Bitcoin and watched it dip. It came from leveraged positions where the margin for error was razor-thin.
Real-time liquidation data from platforms like Coinglass has become essential infrastructure for serious traders. Monitoring where liquidation clusters sit on the order book, essentially the price levels where large amounts of leveraged positions would get force-closed, offers a map of where the market’s pressure points are hiding.
Short squeezes like this one can also create misleading signals. The price surge driven by forced buying doesn’t necessarily reflect organic demand or a fundamental shift in market sentiment. It’s mechanical buying, not conviction buying.
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