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Crypto derivatives suffer $471m in 24-hour liquidations

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A sharp volatility spike wiped out $471m in crypto derivatives positions in one day.

Summary
  • Total crypto liquidations over 24 hours reached about $471m across major exchanges.
  • Shorts absorbed the bulk of the damage, with $348m rekt versus $123m in long liquidations.
  • Bitcoin, Ethereum and other majors saw funding reset as overleveraged bearish bets were squeezed.

Crypto derivatives traders endured another brutal reset as roughly $471m in futures positions were liquidated over a 24-hour window, according to data.

Liquidations are telling a story here.

The move toward $74K wiped out a large wave of short positions, with total crypto liquidations nearing $600M.

As the chart shows, several spikes came from shorts getting forced out as price pushed higher.

That clears overhead pressure.… pic.twitter.com/BwVGPuvQdm

— Wess (@WessWeb3) March 5, 2026

Unlike many prior stress events, this wave hit short-sellers hardest, with about $348m in short liquidations compared to $123m from longs, suggesting that bears were caught leaning too aggressively into downside bets as prices rebounded. The skew was particularly pronounced in flagship contracts tied to Bitcoin ($BTC) and Ethereum ($ETH), where a swift move higher forced exchanges’ risk engines to close underwater positions into rising markets.

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The liquidation pattern reflects a market where sentiment flipped from cautious to overly pessimistic before the latest rally. In the lead-up to the move, open interest had rebuilt as traders added fresh short exposure on the assumption that recent gains would fade. When spot prices broke higher instead, those trades were rapidly unwound, amplifying the upside through a classic short squeeze dynamic. The episode underscores how quickly positioning can turn and how reliance on high leverage—regardless of direction—exposes traders to abrupt, forced exits when liquidity thins and volatility spikes.

Leverage squeeze and positioning reset

In the aftermath of the $471m flush, derivatives metrics suggest that some of the froth on the short side has now been cleared, with funding rates normalizing and open interest stabilizing at slightly lower levels. For $BTC and other large-cap assets, that reset may provide a cleaner backdrop for spot-led moves, reducing the immediate risk of another squeeze in either direction. However, the frequency of large liquidation events in recent weeks indicates that many market participants continue to run elevated leverage, quickly rebuilding directional bets once prices show a trend.

Exchanges are likely to face renewed scrutiny over headline leverage limits, margin policies and transparency around liquidation algorithms, particularly as institutional interest in derivatives grows alongside ETF and structured-product flows. Platforms like Coinbase, which emphasize regulated derivatives offerings, and policymakers advancing frameworks similar to MiCA will watch closely how these episodes impact market integrity. Until leverage metrics show a more durable decline, professional desks may keep gross exposure in check, use options to hedge tail risks, and monitor liquidation dashboards to avoid positioning where cascading forced selling or buying can quickly overwhelm order books.

$BTC is currently trading near $72,000, extending its rebound from last week’s pullback and reclaiming key resistance after testing lower support levels. The move toward $72,000 comes alongside a broader recovery in crypto majors, with renewed inflows into spot $BTC products and higher derivatives activity signaling improving risk appetite. Market outlook for $BTC remains cautiously bullish at these levels: trend structures have turned constructive again, but elevated volatility around $72,000 leaves room for sharp swings if macro or geopolitical sentiment deteriorates.

Read more: XRP price eyes a rebound as ETF inflows rise, exchange outflows rise