Exchanges wipe out $2 billion overnight as Bitcoin breaks to $81k — what today’s pain says about the next move
Bitcoin’s break below $85,000 triggered more than $2 billion in crypto derivatives liquidations within 24 hours as risk assets came under pressure again.
BTC briefly approached $85,000 earlier in the week before bouncing, but momentum for a recovery was minimal as it broke down as low as $81,600 overnight.
Bitcoin liquidations hit $2 billion overnight
CoinGlass data shows more than $2 billion in crypto derivatives liquidations over the past 24 hours, exacerbating the scale of forced unwinds as volatility picked up.
The bulk came from long positions, with CoinGlass data showing about $1.86 billion in long liquidations versus roughly $140 million from shorts.
One-hour and four-hour panels on the same dashboard show the cascade arriving in waves rather than a single print, which fits with market commentary about a grind lower through multiple support levels instead of an abrupt crash.
CoinGlass’ exchange heatmap points to a concentrated flush on Bybit and Hyperliquid, which together accounted for more than half of the notional wiped out over 24 hours.
Bybit, Hyperliquid and Binance carried the heaviest books, followed by HTX and OKX. The distribution across major venues over the latest 24-hour window appears as:
| All | $2.00B | $1.86B | $140.20M |
| Bybit | $629.11M | $595.43M | $33.68M |
| Hyperliquid | $628.82M | $620.80M | $8.02M |
| Binance | $282.28M | $228.86M | $53.42M |
| HTX | $152.11M | $146.18M | $5.93M |
| OKX | $138.65M | $114.16M | $24.49M |
On the asset side, CoinGlass’ symbol heatmap shows BTC accounting for about $1.01 billion of the 24-hour total, with ETH near $423 million and SOL over $100 million.
That pattern fits a classic beta ladder where the benchmark future takes the first blow, then large alt pairs follow as margin calls propagate through retail-heavy venues. Smaller caps fill the remaining “Others” bucket on the treemap, but their notional contribution remains modest compared with the top three names.
Traders remain in Extreme Fear
Sentiment metrics have moved in tandem with the deleveraging. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index sits in the “Extreme Fear” band around 10 to 15, according to the latest reading cited by market trackers.
That is one of the lowest prints since the early stages of the current cycle and comes less than a month after the same gauge spent time in “Greed” territory near all-time highs. Such a sharp shift does not in itself mark capitulation or a floor, but it confirms that positioning and mood have flipped from momentum chasing to capital preservation in a short window.
The backdrop in spot markets helps explain why the break of $85,000 drew such an outsized response from derivatives books. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen record net outflows in November, with more than $3 billion leaving the group so far.
Those vehicles absorbed new issuance and secondary selling during earlier corrections; without that steady bid, dips now lean harder on discretionary buyers and short-term traders. As redemptions continue, the buffer that once absorbed forced selling from perps shrinks, so each wave of liquidations has greater impact on price.
On futures venues, CoinGlass’ BTC futures metrics show funding rates compressing toward neutral across major exchanges, with some books briefly flirting with negative but not flipping over in a sustained way.
Open interest has also rolled back from September and October highs that some analytics platforms had already flagged as a seven-month peak.
With funding now only marginally positive, longs are paying far less to hold exposure, which usually signals that speculative leverage is being pared back rather than aggressively rebuilt.
The drop in open interest confirms that some leverage has left the system, which can reduce crash risk, but it also means there is less immediate firepower available for any sharp rebound until new positions are added.
Options markets are leaning toward protection rather than outright bullish bets. Deribit’s DVOL index has ticked higher into the low-60s on an implied volatility basis, while short-dated skew data from tools such as show a premium for put options over comparable calls.
According to Deribit metrics, traders have been paying up for downside convexity in the front part of the curve, which leaves dealers short gamma around nearby strikes. That structure can amplify intraday moves near levels such as $82,000–$88,000, as even small spot flows force hedging in the same direction as the price move.
Prices to watch for Bitcoin
Key spot levels now frame the short-term scenarios. The former support at $85,000 has turned into the first area bulls need to reclaim to ease pressure from liquidations and to reduce the incentive for shorts to lean on perps.
Below, the $82,000 to $79,000 pocket combines a high-volume node on many on-chain and order book tools with the round-number psychology. Overhead, the $90,000 to $94,000 band marks the region of the last breakdown and contains heavy open interest in short-dated call options on Deribit.
Macro conditions add further headwinds. The U.S. dollar index has firmed month-over-month and the 10-year Treasury yield trades around 4.1–4.2%, in line with a Reuters poll that projects only a modest drift higher over the next year.
Historically, crypto rallies have struggled when both the dollar and real yields move higher together, as risk assets compete with safer instruments for capital.
This month’s pullback in equities and other growth proxies, has reinforced the sense that crypto is again trading as a high-beta expression of broader risk sentiment rather than a separate store-of-value trade.
From here, market participants are sketching three broad paths for the next few weeks.
A base case has BTC chopping between roughly $82,000 and $90,000 while ETF outflows moderate, funding hovers around flat and DVOL stabilizes as weekly options roll off.
A more bearish path would see repeated failures to hold or retake $85,000, opening a liquidity run into the high $70,000s where options put interest and spot support cluster.
A more constructive setup would involve a firm reclaim of $85,000, a turn toward net inflows in U.S. ETFs on the dashboard and a softening of put skew, which could leave shorts vulnerable to a move back toward the low $90,000s.
For now, the liquidation maps show where the first wave of pain landed, and funding, flows and volatility will show whether that flush has cleared the path for consolidation or set the stage for another round.
The post Exchanges wipe out $2 billion overnight as Bitcoin breaks to $81k — what today’s pain says about the next move appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Vitalik Buterin's Perspective on ZK Technology: Driving Crypto Infrastructure Forward and Enabling Sustainable Value Creation
- Vitalik Buterin champions ZK technology as Ethereum's scalability and privacy cornerstone in 2025. - He proposes removing modexp precompile to cut ZK computational overhead by 50x, prioritizing ZK-native efficiency. - ZK integration with MPC/FHE creates hybrid cryptographic stacks, accelerating institutional adoption and 30% stablecoin transaction volume via rollups. - Projects like Polygon's Katana ($512M TVL) and ZKP's ZK-native blockchain demonstrate ZK's transition from experimental to infrastructure
Vitalik Buterin's Support for ZKsync: Driving Ethereum's Layer 2 Leadership and Unlocking Strong Investment Potential
- Vitalik Buterin endorses ZKsync's Atlas upgrade, signaling Ethereum's strategic shift to ZK-based scaling solutions. - Atlas enables 15,000 TPS with 1-second finality, unifying Ethereum's Layer 1 and Layer 2 liquidity through ZK proofs. - ZK token surged 50% post-endorsement as institutional adoption grows, driven by deflationary tokenomics and enterprise-grade scalability. - Upcoming Fusaka upgrade aims to double throughput to 30,000 TPS, solidifying ZKsync's competitive edge in Ethereum's Layer 2 ecosy
UK Investigation Connects Tether to Financing Conflicts and Political Contributions
- UK authorities dismantled a £25M stablecoin laundering network linking UK crime to Russian war funding via Tether (USDT), with 128 arrests and cash/crypto seizures. - Russian intelligence exploited similar crypto networks to fund a spy ring led by ex-Wirecard executive Jan Marsalek, channeling £45K through Tether for espionage and assassination plots. - Tether's UK political ties emerged as major donor Christopher Harborne, who owns 12% of the stablecoin, donated £10M to Nigel Farage's Brexit Party amid

Ethereum News Update: Investors Move Toward Ozak AI as AI-Powered Blockchain Exceeds $4.5 Million in Presale
- Ozak AI's $4.5M presale surges as analysts predict 83x price growth to $1 by 2026, driven by AI-blockchain integration. - Platform combines AI prediction agents with DeFi optimization, partnering with Perceptron Network, HIVE , and SINT for decentralized automation. - Ethereum investors shift capital to Ozak AI, viewing it as a next-gen complement to traditional blockchain infrastructure amid ETH's consolidation phase. - C3.ai's 27.4% stock decline contrasts Ozak AI's momentum, as AI sector volatility hi

