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The cryptocurrency market experienced its largest liquidation event in history on October 10, 2025, as U.S. President Donald Trump announced a 100% tariff on Chinese imports and export controls on critical software. The move triggered a global sell-off, erasing over $19.16 billion in long positions within hours [1].
(BTC) plummeted from $122,000 to $102,000, while (ETH) and altcoins saw losses of up to 99% in intraday wicks [3]. Total crypto market capitalization fell to $3.74 trillion, down from $4.30 trillion the previous day .The crash was fueled by a combination of geopolitical tensions and fragile market infrastructure. Trump's tariff announcement, framed as a response to China's export controls on rare earth materials, reignited trade war fears and triggered a risk-off sentiment. On-chain data revealed over 1.62 million traders were liquidated, with $16.81 billion in long positions and $2.5 billion in shorts wiped out [5]. The scale of the event dwarfed prior crashes: the $1.6 billion FTX collapse in 2022 and the $1.2 billion liquidations during the March 2020 pandemic-driven sell-off [1].

Technical vulnerabilities exacerbated the downturn. Thin order books on exchanges like Binance and Bybit collapsed under pressure, with Bitcoin's bid depth evaporating by 60% below $110,000 [3]. Auto-deleveraging (ADL) protocols amplified the crisis, forcibly unwinding positions as liquidity vanished. Binance reported $4.44 billion in
liquidations alone, while Hyperliquid handled $70 million in liquidations without bankruptcies [3]. Stablecoins also suffered: Ethena's depegged to $0.62 amid collateral failures, and wrapped ETH (WBETH) broke pegs by 5% [3].Altcoins bore the brunt of the sell-off.
(SOL) dropped 25% to $168.79, fell 2.67%, and tokens like lost 80%+ in "zero-bid" moments [2]. DeFi protocols faced $10 billion in forced sales, and total TVL declined 15% as leveraged synthetics unraveled [3]. Exchange outages further worsened the crisis: Binance acknowledged "heavy market activity" causing system delays, while and Robinhood reported similar issues . Critics accused Binance of market manipulation, citing frozen accounts and failed stop-loss orders during the crash .Despite the severity, analysts view the event as a "controlled detonation" rather than a collapse. Bitcoin's 38% depeg in USDe and 5% break in
signaled overleveraged positions being flushed out [3]. Post-crash data showed Bitcoin clawing back to $112,000, with Ethereum hovering near $3,850. The Fear and Greed Index stabilized at 54, and RSI hit 28, indicating oversold conditions [2]. Institutional activity, including BlackRock's acquisition of 21,180 amid the chaos, suggested potential for a V-shaped rebound [3].The crash exposed systemic weaknesses in crypto's derivatives dominance and reliance on algorithmic market makers. Wintermute and other AMMs withdrew liquidity, exacerbating order book imbalances [3]. However, decentralized exchanges like Hyperliquid demonstrated resilience, handling liquidations without downtime [3]. As markets stabilize, the event may reset volatility for the next bull cycle, provided infrastructure holds.
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