BTC traders brace for $2B liquidation risk as market hovers near key levels
Summary
- Coinglass data show about $2.056b in BTC longs at risk if price slips below roughly $70,346, versus $1.514b in shorts facing liquidation above $77,312.
- Over the last 24 hours, crypto liquidations hit $402m, with $80.7m in longs and $322m in shorts wiped out; Bitcoin alone saw $131m in positions forced out.
- BTC trades around $73,778 and ETH near $2,201, with crowded leverage and tight liquidation bands signaling that the next break could trigger a sharp, forced move.
Coinglass liquidation data is sketching out a brutal risk corridor for Bitcoin (BTC), with billions in leveraged positions sitting just above and below spot. According to figures summarized by Jinshi Finance, if BTC drops below roughly $70,346, cumulative long liquidations on major centralized exchanges would climb to around $2.056 billion. On the flip side, a squeeze above about $77,312 would put some $1.514 billion worth of short positions at risk of being wiped out.
That overhang comes after an already heavy flush in the last 24 hours. Across the crypto market, total liquidations reached about $402 million over the period, with roughly $80.6751 million in longs and $322 million in shorts forced out of their positions. For Bitcoin alone, longs lost around $20.3203 million versus approximately $111 million in short liquidations, while Ethereum traders saw about $16.483 million in long positions and $142 million in shorts liquidated. In total, 94,026 traders were liquidated, with the largest single order — on Bitfinex’s tBTCF0:USTF0 pair — clocking in near $6.9442 million.
Despite that, spot prices in majors remain elevated. Bitcoin is currently trading around $73,778, up about 5.8% over the last 24 hours, after ranging between roughly $69,460 and $73,770 on more than $55.4 billion in volume. Ethereum is changing hands near $2,201, higher by around 6.8% on the day, with a 24‑hour low of about $2,041.70 and high of $2,200.03, and turnover close to $27.76 billion. This combination — strong spot, heavy leverage, and tightly clustered liquidation bands — is exactly the kind of setup that tends to produce sharp, directional moves when one side finally loses its grip.
For now, the message from the derivatives tape is simple: positioning is crowded, and the next impulsive move will likely be amplified by forced deleveraging. Traders running size around these levels need to respect the liquidation heatmap as much as the chart. Real‑time stats for majors are available via crypto.news dashboards for Bitcoin and Ethereum. For more on how leverage has shaped recent swings, see earlier reporting on why Bitcoin briefly slid under $66K, the latest ETF‑driven flows into BTC, and Michael Saylor’s continued treasury‑backed accumulation of Bitcoin.


