A total of $272 million in crypto derivatives contracts were liquidated across the network in the past 24 hours, with long positions accounting for $228 million of the wipeout as Bitcoin’s 2.55% price decline triggered cascading forced closures.
According to data compiled by CoinAnk, the liquidation event swept across the entire crypto futures market, not isolated to a single exchange or asset. Long positions made up 83.8% of total liquidations at $228 million, while short positions accounted for just $44.25 million.
Bitcoin futures led the damage with $108 million in liquidations, the largest single-asset contribution. Ethereum followed at $73.96 million, meaning BTC and ETH together represented roughly $182 million, or 67%, of the total.
The 5:1 ratio of long-to-short liquidations signals that traders were heavily positioned for upside before the selloff hit. That kind of imbalance is notable; it reflects a market that was overwhelmingly bullish on leverage right before prices turned against it.
When a trader opens a leveraged long position, they are betting the asset’s price will rise. If the price falls below a certain threshold, the exchange automatically closes the position to prevent further losses. This is a liquidation.
With Bitcoin trading at approximately $68,818, down 2.55% over the 24-hour period, leveraged long positions across BTC and ETH hit their liquidation thresholds in rapid succession. Each forced closure adds sell pressure to the order book, pushing the price lower and triggering more liquidations in a cascade effect.
High leverage amplifies this dynamic. A trader using 10x leverage on a long position only needs a 10% adverse price move to lose their entire margin. At 20x or higher, common in crypto derivatives markets, even a 2-3% drop like the one seen here can wipe out positions rapidly.
The $108 million in Bitcoin liquidations alone exceeded total short liquidations across all assets, underscoring just how one-sided the positioning was. This pattern is consistent with periods where retail and speculative traders pile into longs during a perceived uptrend, only to be caught off-guard by a reversal.
This type of leveraged wipeout is not unique to the current cycle. Earlier this year, major institutional players like Boyaa Interactive committed up to $70 million toward crypto acquisitions, reflecting bullish conviction that may have filtered down into leveraged retail positioning.
The Fear & Greed Index sat at 10 on March 22, deep in “Extreme Fear” territory. That reading, combined with $228 million in long liquidations, paints a clear picture: the market was positioned bullish, the trade went wrong, and sentiment has swung sharply negative.
Mass long liquidation events like this one typically serve as a leverage flush. With overleveraged positions cleared from the system, the market often sees reduced volatility in the short term as the excess risk is removed.
Traders watching for the next move will focus on a few concrete metrics. Open interest levels across major exchanges will show whether new leveraged positions are being rebuilt or whether traders are staying on the sidelines. Funding rates on perpetual futures contracts will indicate whether the remaining market leans bullish or bearish.
A return to positive funding rates with rising open interest would suggest bulls are re-entering. Flat or negative funding with declining open interest would point to continued caution.
The broader crypto market has faced pressure on multiple fronts recently. Separate events, including the Resolv Labs USR stablecoin losing its peg after an attacker minted 80 million tokens and Fluid suspending its USR marketplace, have added to an environment of uncertainty that may have contributed to the bearish momentum.
Bitcoin’s 24-hour trading volume of approximately $28.86 billion suggests the selloff was backed by meaningful participation, not a thin-liquidity flash crash. With BTC’s market cap near $1.377 trillion, the $272 million liquidation event represents a small fraction of total market value, but its impact on leveraged traders was disproportionate and immediate.
The key question now is whether the leverage flush resets conditions for a recovery or marks the beginning of a deeper pullback. The answer will show up first in the derivatives funding rates, open interest changes, and whether the next wave of positioning favors longs or shorts.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.


