The crypto market lost altitude on Tuesday, slipping 2% to about $3.9 trillion as Bitcoin fell toward $112,000 and erased the week’s gains, with roughly $1.7 billion in liquidations accelerating the sell-off as leveraged positions 1 was last down about 1.8% near $112,561, while Ethereum fell 3.3% to $41,197, BNB dropped 4% to $991.3, and Solana slid 6.2% to $219.03. In the past 24 hours, about $1.7b of mostly long positions were wiped out, the largest long liquidation event this year, Coinglass 2 Boost Meets Micro Headwinds, FTX Cash Returns And Sentiment Sours Flows into crypto funds remained a bright spot last 3 Ethereum ETFs recorded $556m in net inflows, lifting total net assets to $29.6b, according to 4 the same period, spot Bitcoin ETFs attracted $886.6m, taking total net assets to $152.31b.
GM! The biggest long liquidation so far this year. 24h long liquidation:$1.62B Total liquidation in the past 24 hours: $1.70B. 0 5 — CoinGlass (@coinglass_com) September 22, 2025 Macro signals set the 6 Federal Reserve cut rates by 25 basis points last week to a target range of 4.00% to 4.25%, and signaled two more possible cuts this 7 first move initially buoyed altcoins, which rallied into the 8 faded on 9 cooled shortly after the defunct crypto exchange FTX said it will begin its third distribution on Sept. 30, returning about $1.6b to holders of allowed claims as part of its Chapter 11 10 gauges turned more 11 at Santiment noted on Sunday that more traders are now “betting that the price of Bitcoin will go down, as opposed to betting that Bitcoin’s price will go up,” and said they were seeing a “much more negative narrative forming across social media.” Liquidation Spike Signals Possible Local Low As Funding Turns Negative Positioning also shifted. 10X Research said that sharp liquidation spikes often mark local lows and can raise the odds of a rebound, a view supported by negative funding rates that show faster traders are net 12 note urged traders to weigh positioning, technical signals and how the market is priced into October before buying 13 executives framed the sell-off as a leverage flush rather than a fundamental 14 Vujinovic, CEO and co-founder of Digital Assets at FG Nexus, said, “Roughly $1.7B in liquidations reflects excess leverage, not failing 15 funding post-Fed left traders exposed; once Bitcoin rolled over, forced unwinds hit ETH and alt-books hard.” “But history shows that these ‘leverage washes’ often mark a healthier 16 spot demand, ETF flows, and stablecoin rails intact, we’re more likely heading into consolidation than capitulation and that typically precedes the next sustained leg higher,” she 17 Drive ‘Margin Call Avalanche,’ Traders See Healthy Reset Traders echoed that view on market 18 Colkitt, initial contributor to Fogo, said, “This is crypto’s version of a margin call 19 Bitcoin sneezes, the entire market catches leverage flu. $1.7B in liquidations isn’t fundamentals breaking—it’s over-levered traders getting 20 is always highest at the top, and when prices roll over, the cascade feeds on itself.” “These flushes are brutal, but they’re also 21 reset leverage, shake out weak hands, and clear the runway for the next 22 you’ve been around crypto long enough, then you already know the cold hard truth: liquidations are the feature, not the bug,” he 23 pointed to Bitcoin’s relative 24 Maloney, CEO at Incyt, said, “The $1B+ liquidation wave was driven by long 25 exuberance following an ATH, the anemic Fed cut, and a mismatch of reporting and risk creates a 26 real capture here is that BTC is still the king of crypto markets: despite weathering the worst liquidation, BTC decline and volatility are a fraction of other 27 suggests to me that the market will bounce up strongly on the back of BTC’s liquidity.” As September draws to a close, traders are watching funding, ETF flows, and the pace of redemptions from bankruptcy 28 now, the market has reset leverage and attention turns to whether dip buyers step in ahead of October.
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