On December 29th, the market experienced a painful round of liquidation. Data shows that a total of $168 million in positions were forcibly closed that day, with shorts becoming the biggest losers.
Specifically, Ethereum was hit the hardest, with a liquidation amount of $45.26 million. Bitcoin followed closely behind with $44.96 million, which is not negligible, and even Solana contributed $10.77 million in liquidations. What does this liquidation pattern reflect? Essentially, it indicates that short sellers misjudged the market trend—they bet on a decline, only to be brutally slapped in the face by the market's upward trend. The market volatility before the end of the year was indeed fierce.
What further illustrates the point is the data from derivatives. Bitcoin's open interest surged by 4.96%, expanding to $59.4 billion; Ethereum's open interest was even more dramatic, soaring by 5.98% to $39.2 billion. Coupled with the fact that funding rates have remained positive, it’s clear: the bulls have completely taken control.
Honestly, although such large-scale short liquidations look brutal, from a certain perspective, they serve a purpose—clearing out over-leveraged ghost orders in the market. Once these risk exposures are cleaned up, the subsequent upward trend will be healthier and more sustainable. The market is self-repairing.
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YieldChaser
· 7h ago
The bears got wiped out again, the bulls are really fierce this time.
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quietly_staking
· 7h ago
The shorts got wiped out again, this time really badly. Liquidation of $168 million, the bulls played too aggressively this time.
Is this how the year-end push ends? Luckily I didn't use leverage, it just looks painful.
The bulls have already fully taken off, should I enter or wait?
This is market self-healing, clearing out bad positions. It should become more stable later, or is it another trap?
The open interest for ETH and BTC has exploded, and the funding rate is still positive, it seems the bulls will continue to eat losses.
This shorting move was a real misjudgment, betting on a decline and getting slapped in the face. Do you think they deserve it?
The lesson from $168 million in losses, newcomers take note, this is what market costs look like.
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ConsensusBot
· 7h ago
The shorts got cut again, serves them right. The longs played this round beautifully, and the funding rate is skyrocketing.
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TokenDustCollector
· 7h ago
The short positions got liquidated again, this time really disastrous, losing $168 million haha
This round of liquidation actually feels pretty satisfying; those who went all-in on shorting finally tasted some bitterness
The bulls are so aggressive now, with open interest soaring by 6%. With this trend, do you still want to catch the bottom? Dream on
Hey, after clearing out leveraged positions like this, will the market really be more stable afterward? Or will there be another round?
ETH $45 million liquidation, at least the market can breathe a sigh of relief now
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AirdropHunterWang
· 7h ago
The bears got taught another lesson, haha, this is what you get for betting in the wrong direction.
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DegenApeSurfer
· 7h ago
Another batch of shorts has been wiped out, this is the price of playing with leverage haha
On December 29th, the market experienced a painful round of liquidation. Data shows that a total of $168 million in positions were forcibly closed that day, with shorts becoming the biggest losers.
Specifically, Ethereum was hit the hardest, with a liquidation amount of $45.26 million. Bitcoin followed closely behind with $44.96 million, which is not negligible, and even Solana contributed $10.77 million in liquidations. What does this liquidation pattern reflect? Essentially, it indicates that short sellers misjudged the market trend—they bet on a decline, only to be brutally slapped in the face by the market's upward trend. The market volatility before the end of the year was indeed fierce.
What further illustrates the point is the data from derivatives. Bitcoin's open interest surged by 4.96%, expanding to $59.4 billion; Ethereum's open interest was even more dramatic, soaring by 5.98% to $39.2 billion. Coupled with the fact that funding rates have remained positive, it’s clear: the bulls have completely taken control.
Honestly, although such large-scale short liquidations look brutal, from a certain perspective, they serve a purpose—clearing out over-leveraged ghost orders in the market. Once these risk exposures are cleaned up, the subsequent upward trend will be healthier and more sustainable. The market is self-repairing.