The crypto crash causes chaos: $61 million Bitcoin position liquidated on HTX

The recent crypto crash has shaken up the market and led to massive liquidations, trapping both large and small investors. What started as a moderate decline quickly turned into a market-wide sell-off, exposing the vulnerability of traders with leveraged positions without mercy.

The Extent of Liquidations in the Crypto Market

The price drop in Bitcoin was dramatic. BTC fell from around $68,600 over the weekend to $64,300—a decline that completely wiped out the weekend gains within hours. The consequences were devastating: total liquidations amounted to approximately $467.64 million across more than 137,000 traders.

At the heart of this crypto crash was a single mega-liquidation on the HTX exchange. A Bitcoin-USDT position worth $61.5 million was forcibly closed—according to data from CoinGlass, the largest single liquidation in the past 24 hours. The scale of this liquidation suggests it was not a typical retail trader but rather a concentrated whale or fund position that fell victim to the price decline.

Long positions bore the brunt: totaling $434 million, they accounted for about 93% of all liquidations. This indicates that the market was still optimistic at the start of the week, betting on rising prices—until buyers exited the arena, leaving the market uncovered.

The effects extended across all major cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin futures alone saw forced liquidations of $213.62 million, followed by Ethereum (ETH) with $113.89 million and Solana (SOL) with $19.89 million. Notably, the Hyperliquid Token (HYPE) experienced $10.72 million in liquidations—an unusually high figure for an asset outside the top five in liquidation volume.

Extreme Fear Dominates Market Psychology

The psychological damage from the crypto crash may be even greater than the numbers suggest. The Crypto Fear and Greed Index from Alternative.me plummeted to a frightening 5 out of 100—classified as “extreme fear.” This extreme level has only been reached three times since the index’s inception in 2018: in August 2019, June 2022, and again in early February this year, when Bitcoin collapsed to $60,000.

Data from Glassnode highlight ongoing market pressure. The seven-day moving average of realized net losses among Bitcoin buyers over recent weeks still hovers around $500 million per day. This means short-term investors are continuously exiting their positions, even after the initial decline in February.

Glassnode commented aptly: “While the intensity has decreased, the broader regime still signals a stressed market, with participants in the early stages of capitulation.”

The Repeating Pattern: Leverage as a Launchpad

Bitcoin is currently about 48% below its all-time high of $126,000 from October and 5.5% below the 2021 bull market peak of $69,000. This level now acts as a psychological resistance, repeatedly tested.

However, while the crypto crash has heavily involved leveraged positions, the underlying pattern remains unchanged: after each rebound, traders aggressively load up on long positions, only to be punished again. This cycle—rapid price surges, cascade liquidations, reassessments—will continue as long as investors use leverage as a core investment strategy.

The crypto crash is thus not just an isolated event but a symptom of a deeper market structure built on excessive leverage. Until this is addressed, similar scenarios are likely to recur, leaving more whales behind.

BTC2,5%
HTX-0,75%
ETH3,44%
SOL4,54%
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