Bitcoin Flash Crash Causes $710 Million In Crypto Long Liquidations
December 07 2024 - 12:30AM
NEWSBTC
Data shows the cryptocurrency derivatives market has suffered a
massive amount of liquidations after the Bitcoin flash crash during
the past 24 hours. Bitcoin Has Witnessed Significant Volatility
During The Last Day BTC has displayed some wild price action in the
past day, with both a high of $103,500 and a low $90,500 occurring
inside a narrow window. The move to the latter level, in
particular, was so sharp that it could only be described as a flash
crash. Related Reading: Bitcoin Sets New ATH Above $104,000, Yet
Investors Don’t Want To Sell Below is a chart that shows how the
asset’s recent trajectory has been like. From the graph, it’s
visible that the sharp red candle only lasted briefly, as the
cryptocurrency was quick to rebound back to higher levels. After
the recovery, the coin is trading at around $98,000, which means
it’s still down around 5% since the top. In usual fashion, the
other top digital assets have also followed BTC in this bearish
price action, but the likes of Ethereum (ETH) and Solana (SOL) have
proven to be more resilient as their prices are down just 2% during
the past day. The latest market-wide volatility has meant that
chaos has occurred over on the derivatives side of the
cryptocurrency sector. Cryptocurrency Longs Have Just Witnessed A
Liquidation Squeeze According to data from CoinGlass, the
cryptocurrency derivatives market has suffered a large amount of
liquidations as assets across the sector have seen sharp price
action. As displayed in the above table, cryptocurrency derivatives
positions worth a whopping $893 million have found liquidation in
the last 24 hours. A contract is said to be “liquidated” when the
exchange forcibly shuts it down after it amasses losses of a
certain degree. Almost $733 million of these liquidations have
involved long contracts, which represents 82% of the total. This
steep dominance of the longs is naturally a result of the net
bearish action that Bitcoin and others have gone through. Related
Reading: Bitcoin 30-Day Trader Profits Back In ‘Healthy’ Range, Is
BTC Ready For $100,000? A Mass liquidation event like this latest
one is popularly known as a “squeeze.” Since longs made up for the
majority of this squeeze, it would be called a long squeeze. The
long squeeze that the derivatives sector has just suffered may
perhaps have been the obvious conclusion to the red-hot market
conditions that were developing in its lead-up. As CryptoQuant
community analyst Maartunn has pointed out in an X post, the Open
Interest shot up alongside the Bitcoin surge. Generally, whenever
derivatives positions explode during a rally, it means that the
surge is leverage-driven. Price moves of this type can unwind in a
volatile manner. The Open Interest rose by more than 15% in the
recent Bitcoin run, which is considered a very significant amount.
When the price reversed its direction, all these leveraged longs
were caught up in the squeeze, which only provided further fuel for
the crash, explaining its particularly sharp nature. Featured image
from Dall-E, CoinGlass.com, CryptoQuant.com, chart from
TradingView.com
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