Over $340M in longs wiped out in 24 hours as crypto leverage gets a reality check

Over $340M in longs wiped out in 24 hours as crypto leverage gets a reality check

Bitcoin and Ethereum perpetual futures bore the brunt of a liquidation cascade that swept through major exchanges

The crypto derivatives market just reminded everyone, once again, that leverage is a double-edged sword. Over $361 million in long positions were liquidated in a single 24-hour window, according to data from Coinglass, as traders betting on higher prices found themselves on the wrong end of a forced exit.

Total liquidations across the market hit approximately $456 million during the same period, but longs accounted for roughly $366 million of that figure. In other words, about 80% of the pain was felt by traders who thought prices were heading up.

Advertisement

A cascade that fed on itself

The liquidations were primarily concentrated in perpetual futures contracts on major exchanges. Bitcoin and Ethereum trading pairs made up the bulk of the affected volume, which tracks with their dominance in the derivatives market.

Bitcoin’s price had been fluctuating near critical support levels below $64,000 and $62,000, creating the kind of environment where leveraged positions are most vulnerable.

The scale of affected traders tells the story clearly. Between 100,000 and 200,000 traders were impacted during these volatile sessions across June.

June has been a brutal month for bulls

Earlier in June, the crypto market experienced even more severe deleveraging events, with liquidation spikes exceeding $1.5 billion in 24 hours as Bitcoin prices fell below $62,000.

What this means for investors

Real-time liquidation data from platforms like Coinglass has become essential infrastructure for anyone trading crypto derivatives. Monitoring open interest levels, funding rates, and liquidation clusters provides a clearer picture of where the market’s pressure points sit. In a market where $361 million can vanish in a day, flying blind isn’t an option.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Over $340M in longs wiped out in 24 hours as crypto leverage gets a reality check

Over $340M in longs wiped out in 24 hours as crypto leverage gets a reality check

Bitcoin and Ethereum perpetual futures bore the brunt of a liquidation cascade that swept through major exchanges

Share

Add us on Google

The crypto derivatives market just reminded everyone, once again, that leverage is a double-edged sword. Over $361 million in long positions were liquidated in a single 24-hour window, according to data from Coinglass, as traders betting on higher prices found themselves on the wrong end of a forced exit.

Total liquidations across the market hit approximately $456 million during the same period, but longs accounted for roughly $366 million of that figure. In other words, about 80% of the pain was felt by traders who thought prices were heading up.

Advertisement

A cascade that fed on itself

The liquidations were primarily concentrated in perpetual futures contracts on major exchanges. Bitcoin and Ethereum trading pairs made up the bulk of the affected volume, which tracks with their dominance in the derivatives market.

Bitcoin’s price had been fluctuating near critical support levels below $64,000 and $62,000, creating the kind of environment where leveraged positions are most vulnerable.

The scale of affected traders tells the story clearly. Between 100,000 and 200,000 traders were impacted during these volatile sessions across June.

June has been a brutal month for bulls

Earlier in June, the crypto market experienced even more severe deleveraging events, with liquidation spikes exceeding $1.5 billion in 24 hours as Bitcoin prices fell below $62,000.

What this means for investors

Real-time liquidation data from platforms like Coinglass has become essential infrastructure for anyone trading crypto derivatives. Monitoring open interest levels, funding rates, and liquidation clusters provides a clearer picture of where the market’s pressure points sit. In a market where $361 million can vanish in a day, flying blind isn’t an option.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.