Over $871M in crypto longs liquidated in past 24 hours as tariff fears rattle markets
Nearly 249,000 traders got caught on the wrong side of a leverage-fueled wipeout triggered by fresh Trump administration tariff threats against the EU.
The crypto futures market just had one of those days. Over $871 million in positions were liquidated in a 24-hour span ending January 19, with the overwhelming majority of the pain concentrated on traders who were betting prices would go up.
Long positions accounted for roughly $786 million to $788 million of that total, according to CoinGlass data. In English: for every dollar lost by shorts, longs lost roughly nine. That’s not a balanced correction. That’s a one-sided flush.
What triggered the cascade
The catalyst was geopolitical, not technical. Statements from the Trump administration regarding tariffs on EU imports injected a fresh dose of uncertainty into markets that were already trading on edge.
Bitcoin slid below $93,000, touching approximately $92,500 during the sell-off. That level proved to be a tripwire for leveraged traders, setting off a chain reaction of forced liquidations that fed on itself.
About 249,000 traders were caught in this particular loop. The single largest liquidation was a $25.83 million long position on the BTC-USDT pair on Hyperliquid. One trader, one position, nearly $26 million gone.
Where the damage was concentrated
Bitcoin bore the brunt, as it usually does. Liquidations on BTC positions totaled around $224 million. Ethereum came in second at approximately $121 million. The remaining hundreds of millions were spread across altcoin futures.
The Fear and Greed Index declined notably during the event, shifting sentiment from cautious optimism to something considerably less cheerful.
A familiar pattern in 2026
This isn’t an isolated event. It fits a recurring pattern this year where bullish positioning in crypto futures builds up during calm periods, only to get violently unwound when external shocks hit. Macroeconomic policy announcements, trade tensions, and regulatory signals have all served as triggers at various points.
What this means for investors
The concentration of liquidations in long positions, roughly 90% of the total, tells you something about market positioning heading into the event. The futures market was overwhelmingly bullish. That kind of one-sided positioning is inherently unstable because it means there’s a massive amount of forced selling that can be triggered if prices move even modestly in the wrong direction.
Traders should watch positioning data on platforms like CoinGlass closely. When long-to-short ratios skew heavily in one direction, the market is essentially loading a spring. The only question is what pulls the trigger next.
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