Bitcoin 5% flash crash leads to $165M in leveraged crypto liquidations

A sudden 5% drawdown in the price of Bitcoin has caused more than $165 million in leverage positions to be wiped out, with Bitcoin and Ether longs leading the pack.
A sudden 5% drawdown in the price of Bitcoin has caused more than $165 million in leverage positions to be wiped out, with Bitcoin and Ether longs leading the pack.

A sudden 5% drawdown in the price of Bitcoin (BTC) on Tuesday has seen traders with leveraged exposure to Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies rack up over $165 million in losses in less than 2 hours.

Bitcoin plunged 5% from $69,450 to as low as $65,970 in less than 30 minutes, in early hours on March 2 UTC, per TradingView data.

Bitcoin tumbled over 5% in a sudden tumble on April 2. Source: TradingView

According to data from Coinglass, Bitcoin’s sharp wick down saw more than $165 million in leveraged positions wiped out, with just over $50 million in Bitcoin longs and more than $40 million in Ether (ETH) longs accounting for the bulk of that figure.

Roughly $6 million in long positions on Dogecoin (DOGE) and $4 million in Solana (SOL) were liquidated, trailing BTC and ETH.

Bitcoin’s sudden drawdown caused a $165 million leverage flush. Source: CoinGlass

Around the same time as the drawdown, Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) posted a net outflow of $86 million, breaking a four-day positive inflow streak per FarSide data.

BlackRock’s ETF stood as the best-performing fund with a net inflow of $165.9 million, while Fidelity came in second with $44 million.

Related: Memecoin madness is breaking the Bitcoin halving cycle

However, the inflows were weighed down by Grayscale’s GBTC posting $302 million in outflows, bringing the net daily outflows for all the funds to $85.7 million.

Tether wobbles from its peg

At the same time as the Bitcoin flash crash, the value of the U.S. Dollar-pegged stablecoin Tether (USDT) also wobbled around 1%, briefly falling from its $1 peg to $0.988, according to data from CoinGecko and Google Finance.

Tether experienced a brief wobble on some price tracking sites. Source: CoinGecko

It’s unclear if the USDT wobble was an error in the API of certain data trackers or if the value of the currency suffered a sudden loss — however, the brief depeg did not appear on other price trackers.

Cointelegraph contacted Tether but did not receive an immediate response.

Magazine: ‘SEAL 911’ team of white hats formed to fight crypto hacks in real time