Hidden Crypto Market Liquidations May Have Erased $10B Overnight

Crypto markets faced a historic liquidation event this weekend, with losses potentially reaching $8 billion to $10 billion—far exceeding the $2.3 billion initially reported by tracking platforms.

Bybit founder and CEO Ben Zhou revealed the discrepancy in a Feb 3post on X(formerly Twitter), citing API limitations that obscured the full scale of the sell-off.

Bybit CEO Exposes Data Gaps: “Real Liquidations 4X Higher”

Coinglass, a crypto derivatives tracker, reported $2.3 billion in liquidations across exchanges during the trade wars market crash.

However, Zhou disclosed that Bybit alone saw $2.1 billion in liquidations within 24 hours—yet only $333 million appeared on Coinglass.

Source: ByBit CEO X
Source: ByBit CEO X

Zhou attributed the gap to API feed limits, which throttle how much data exchanges can publish per second. “Other exchanges practice the same,” he posted, suggesting industry-wide underreporting. If Bybit’s $2.1 billion represents just 25% of its actual liquidations, as Zhou implied, total market losses could exceed $10 billion.

How API Limits Masked Crypto Markets Crash

Exchanges use API (Application Programming Interface) systems to share real-time data with third-party platforms like Coinglass.

However, these systems cap the volume of information transmitted per second. During extreme volatility, liquidations can outpace API feeds, leaving tracking platforms with incomplete data.

Bybit’s $2.1 billion liquidation event—its largest ever—exposed this flaw. Coinglass recorded only $333 million of Bybit’s losses, missing 84% of the exchange’s activity. Zhou confirmed Bybit will now “push all liquidation data” to ensure transparency.

Crypto Market’s Biggest Liquidation in History?

The Kobeissi Letter, a financial analysis firm, called the event probably the “biggest crypto liquidation in history.” The market sell-off was triggered by President Donald Trump’s February 3 announcement of tariffs on imports from China, Canada, and Mexico, which rattled global risk assets.

Altcoins took the hardest hit: Ethereum dropped 16%, reaching a low of $2,368 before recovering slightly to $2,552, yet it remains 38% below its December 17, 2024, high of $4,078.

Other major altcoins—including Avalanche, XRP, Chainlink, and Dogecoin—fell more than 20% in the last 24 hours, contributing to an 11.4% decline in the overall crypto market cap.

In contrast, Bitcoin fell to $93,00 but showed relative stability; TradingView data reveals that its market dominance increased to 61%, suggesting investors are rotating into Bitcoin as a perceived safer asset amid the turmoil.

Tariffs Paused for a Month

However, on February 3, 2025, after Mexico’s president announced a one-month tariff pause following talks with President Trump, crypto markets started rebounding.

Bitcoin rebounded, climbing 6.7% from a low of $91,530 to over $97,000 as Wall Street opened, according to TradingView. Meanwhile, altcoins fell over 20% amid tariffs on Canada and Mexico and expectations of similar measures against the EU.

Popular trader Johnny on X noted that Bitcoin’s strong support levels suggest the worst of the down move may be over, while Rekt Capital pointed to a new gap above $98,000 in CME futures acting as a short-term price magnet as BTC formed its third consecutive higher low against December and January support.

The post Hidden Crypto Market Liquidations May Have Erased $10B Overnight appeared first on The Coin Republic.

   

The Coin Republic – Read More   

Share This Article
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *