Bitcoin flash crash below $68,000 triggers around $400 million in liquidation in under an hour

Bitcoin flash crash below $68,000 triggers around $400 million in liquidation in under an hour

Today's sudden Bitcoin slide under $68,000 forced a rapid unwind across crypto derivatives markets, erasing nearly $400 million in leveraged positions in one hour as traders who had bet on further gains were caught by the move.

Data from CryptoSlate shows that Bitcoin fell more than 5%, dropping from $71,765 to $67,895, its lowest level since April. The decline pushed the largest digital asset through levels traders had been watching after several sessions of weakening momentum.

The move spread quickly across the broader market. Ethereum fell about 4% to $1,941, while XRP declined more than 3% to $1.24.

Solana, Dogecoin, and BNB also posted losses of more than 3% over the same period, underlining how quickly a Bitcoin-led correction can pressure the rest of the market.

Liquidations accelerate the decline

Coinglass data showed the drop triggered about $394 million in liquidations within one hour.

Long positions accounted for most of the damage, with traders betting on higher prices losing roughly $384 million. Short positions lost about $10.2 million.

Bitcoin traders absorbed the largest losses, with more than $209 million in positions liquidated. Ethereum followed with about $87 million in forced closures, while Solana and XRP traders lost about $27 million and $11 million, respectively.

Bitcoin Market Liquidation
Bitcoin Market Liquidation (Source: CoinGlass)

The figures show how quickly leverage can turn a spot-market decline into a wider market event.

When prices fall through key levels, exchanges automatically close undercollateralized positions, adding sell pressure and forcing traders to exit at unfavorable prices. That process can deepen a move even when the original trigger is less clear.

Over 24 hours, total liquidations reached about $1.02 billion. Long positions accounted for roughly $902 million of that amount, showing that bullish positioning had become crowded before the selloff.

Why did Bitcoin price decline?

Market participants attributed the sudden shift in sentiment to a combination of technical breakdowns and an unexpected disclosure from Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), the software firm known as the world’s largest corporate holder of Bitcoin.

On June 1, the Michael Saylor-led firm revealed it had sold 32 Bitcoin for $2.5 million to fund dividend obligations for its preferred stock.

While the nominal volume is statistically irrelevant relative to global daily spot turnover, the symbolic nature of the transaction weighed heavily on trading desks. This is because Strategy essentially wrote the playbook for aggressive, “never-sell” corporate accumulation.

So, its selling action marked a break from its strict holding ethos and introduced a layer of skepticism into the prevailing corporate treasury narrative.

As a result, the news pushed Bitcoin below several critical on-chain support metrics.

According to analytics provider Glassnode, the spot price descent to $68,800 meant Bitcoin had breached the short-term holder cost basis of $76,900, the true market mean of $78,000, and the active investors' mean of $85,100.

Still, BTC's price remains well above its aggregate realized price of $54,000.

Despite the localized panic, some industry executives cautioned against over-indexing on corporate portfolio adjustments.

Pierre Rochard, chief executive officer of the Bitcoin Bond company, dismissed the notion that a minor divestment by Strategy could single-handedly trigger a systemic market drop. Instead, Rochard pointed to broader capital reallocation trends.

According to him:

“The reality is that there is a massive parabolic spike in AI-related equities that is vacuuming up all excess liquidity.”

Furthermore, he emphasized that a resilient labor market and climbing energy prices have effectively killed near-term expectations for dovish interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve.

Despite this unfavorable macroeconomic landscape, Rochard maintained that Bitcoin's underlying network fundamentals remain fundamentally sound.

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