Crypto liquidations surged past $4.66 billion on June 20, exposing how much leverage had built up across Bitcoin, Ethereum and major altcoins during a volatile trading session.
According to CoinGlass data cited by market trackers, roughly $4.6658 billion in leveraged positions were liquidated over 24 hours. Long liquidations accounted for about $2.4277 billion, while short liquidations reached around $2.2381 billion.
That split matters. This was not a simple crash where only bullish traders were punished. It was a two-sided deleveraging event, where sharp moves in both directions forced traders out of positions and revealed how fragile the derivatives market had become.
Why the June 20 Liquidation Wave Matters
Liquidations happen when leveraged traders no longer have enough margin to keep positions open. Exchanges then force-close those trades, which can accelerate price moves and create a cascade.
That is why large liquidation events matter so much in crypto. They do not just reflect volatility. They can create more volatility.
The June 20 wipeout showed that traders were heavily positioned on both sides of the market. Longs were slightly more affected, making up about 52% of total liquidations. But shorts were also hit hard, especially during intraday rebounds that forced bearish traders to buy back positions.
In plain English, both bulls and bears got punished.
Bitcoin and Ethereum Led the Deleveraging
Bitcoin and Ethereum were at the center of the liquidation wave.
TokenPost’s summary of CoinGlass data showed Bitcoin trading near $106,800 during the event window, with heavy liquidation activity across multiple timeframes. Bitcoin alone saw roughly $1.43 billion in long liquidations and $1.38 billion in short liquidations over 24 hours.
Ethereum also contributed heavily to the market-wide wipeout, as leveraged traders reacted to rapid price swings across the largest crypto assets.
That is important because BTC and ETH usually provide the market’s liquidity backbone. When leverage unwinds there, the impact spreads quickly into altcoins, perpetual futures and cross-margin portfolios.
A Market That Can Rise and Still Liquidate Traders
One of the more unusual parts of the June 20 event is that liquidations were not only tied to falling prices.
Some timeframes showed short liquidations dominating as prices rebounded. Binance accounted for the largest share of liquidations in the four-hour window cited by TokenPost, with shorts making up the majority of forced closures on the exchange.
That suggests the market was not simply collapsing. It was whipping around violently enough to hurt traders in both directions.
This is a classic sign of an overleveraged market. When too many traders use borrowed exposure, even modest price moves can trigger forced liquidations. Once those forced trades begin, they can turn a normal move into a sharper one.
Why Leverage Built Up So Quickly
Crypto traders often increase leverage when prices appear stable or when a strong trend looks obvious.
If Bitcoin grinds higher, late longs may pile in expecting continuation. If the market looks overextended, shorts may enter expecting a reversal. When both sides become crowded, the market becomes vulnerable to sudden squeezes and flushes.
That appears to be what happened on June 20.
Bitcoin and Ethereum were not dealing with only one directional panic. Instead, the market had built enough leverage that both bullish and bearish positions became vulnerable to forced exits.
This is why liquidation data is useful. It shows where traders are overexposed, even when spot prices do not tell the full story.
Altcoins Felt the Shock Too
Major altcoins were not spared.
CoinMarketCap’s market summaries showed that Sui, Solana and other high-beta assets also saw meaningful liquidation activity during the broader event. That is typical during market-wide deleveraging because altcoins often carry thinner liquidity and higher volatility than Bitcoin.
When Bitcoin moves sharply, altcoin leverage can become unstable very quickly.
This matters for traders because altcoin rallies can look strong until leverage starts unwinding. Once forced selling begins, smaller assets can move faster than expected, especially when liquidity is concentrated on a few major exchanges.
What This Means for Market Direction
A major liquidation event does not automatically mean the market is bearish.
Sometimes, liquidations clear out excessive leverage and make the market healthier. If overleveraged longs are flushed out, future selling pressure may weaken. If crowded shorts are squeezed, forced buying can help fuel a rebound.
The problem is that deleveraging also reveals instability.
A market that can wipe out more than $4.66 billion in leveraged positions in a day is not calm. It is still highly sensitive to price shocks, funding shifts, liquidity gaps and macro headlines.
That means the next move depends less on the liquidation number itself and more on what happens after it.
If open interest cools, funding normalizes and spot demand remains strong, the event could be remembered as a leverage reset. If traders quickly rebuild positions and volatility stays elevated, another cascade becomes possible.
What Traders Should Watch Next
The most important metrics now are open interest, funding rates and spot volume.
Open interest shows how much leverage remains in the system. If it falls after a liquidation event and stays lower, that can suggest the market has genuinely reset. If it rebounds immediately, traders may be rebuilding risk before the market has stabilized.
Funding rates show whether longs or shorts are paying heavily to stay in position. Extreme funding can reveal crowded trades before they unwind.
Spot volume matters because sustainable rallies need real buying, not only forced short-covering. A move driven mainly by liquidations can fade once the forced activity ends.
June 20 Was a Warning, Not Just a Wipeout
The June 20 liquidation wave is a reminder that crypto’s biggest risk is often not price direction. It is leverage.
Bitcoin and Ethereum can be in long-term uptrends and still punish traders who use too much borrowed exposure. Altcoins can rally sharply and still collapse if liquidity disappears. Shorts can look smart one hour and be forced out the next.
That is the real lesson from the $4.66 billion wipeout.
The market is still liquid, active and capable of sharp moves. But it is also crowded, reactive and heavily shaped by derivatives.
For investors, the takeaway is caution. For traders, the takeaway is risk management. And for the broader market, the message is clear: crypto has not removed its leverage problem. It has simply learned to hide it until volatility returns.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















