A recent derivatives event revealed positioning pressure that had been quietly building beneath the surface. According to data shared by CryptoQuant, approximatelyA recent derivatives event revealed positioning pressure that had been quietly building beneath the surface. According to data shared by CryptoQuant, approximately

$736M Short Liquidation Marks Largest Wipeout Since 2024

2026/02/15 16:03
2 min read
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A recent derivatives event revealed positioning pressure that had been quietly building beneath the surface.

According to data shared by CryptoQuant, approximately $736 million in short positions were liquidated in a single session, the largest short wipeout since September 20, 2024, when daily liquidations reached $773 million.

The magnitude of the liquidation wave stands out not because of an extreme price surge, but because of how aggressively traders had leaned into downside exposure beforehand.

Heavy Short Positioning Builds Structural Fragility

Despite only a relatively small upward move in price, the scale of liquidations suggests that short positioning had become crowded. Funding rates have frequently been dominated by shorts, indicating that derivatives traders were predominantly positioned for further downside.

When the derivatives market accumulates outsized short exposure while spot liquidity remains limited, structural imbalance develops. The futures side becomes increasingly leveraged, while the underlying spot market struggles to generate sufficient demand to offset that pressure.

The liquidation event therefore reflected forced positioning unwind rather than organic expansion driven purely by new buyers.

Why Liquidation Clusters Matter

When price moves even modestly against heavily concentrated short exposure, liquidation mechanisms automatically convert those positions into market buy orders. This mechanical process can rapidly amplify upside volatility, particularly in conditions where liquidity is thin.

That dynamic often explains why rebounds in such environments appear sharp and compressed rather than gradual and orderly. However, sustained continuation typically requires genuine spot demand to reinforce the move once the liquidation cascade subsides.

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What This Means Going Forward

The $736 million wipeout highlights two structural realities:

  • Short traders remain highly aggressive.
  • The derivatives market is increasingly sensitive to upside volatility.

As long as funding remains skewed toward shorts and positioning stays crowded, the potential for further liquidation-driven moves persists. However, durability will depend on whether spot demand strengthens enough to support price beyond mechanically triggered short covering.

For now, the event underscores positioning imbalance rather than directional certainty, with confirmation dependent on improved liquidity conditions rather than leverage unwind alone.

The post $736M Short Liquidation Marks Largest Wipeout Since 2024 appeared first on ETHNews.

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