
Bitcoin perpetuals ran 67 consecutive days of negative funding — the longest streak in a decade, per K33 Research cited by CoinDesk. When it ended, liquidations followed. But traders with identical short positions, identical leverage, and identical entries didn’t all get liquidated at the same price. The difference had nothing to do with the trade. Data from CoinGlass shows liquidation volumes were unevenly distributed across major exchanges during the period.
The funding flip hit every exchange simultaneously. The results were not simultaneous.
Exchange mechanics determined who got forced out and when:
Why This Matters
The Bigger Story
Most coverage treated this as a positioning story — too many shorts caught on the wrong side. The exchange-level data tells a different story. The same trade, placed at the same time, produced different outcomes on different platforms. Not because of market judgment. Because of how each exchange holds margin, caps funding, and executes forced closes.
“Before opening a leveraged position, there are three numbers that matter more than the trade: maintenance margin at your size, whether the exchange uses partial or full liquidation, and the funding rate cap. Most traders ignore all three. Those numbers decide whether you get a partial close or get wiped out on the same move. They’re public, buried in exchange docs, and almost nobody looks.”
— Anton Palovaara, founder at Leverage.Trading
What Traders Should Take From This
Most traders treat exchange selection as a fees question. This week showed it is a risk question. Maintenance margin thresholds, mark price calculations, and liquidation engine design all vary across platforms, and those differences produce different outcomes for identical positions during the same market move. Leverage.Trading’s research on crypto futures liquidations gives traders a framework for reading an exchange’s liquidation structure before they commit capital, not while they are watching their position close.
Anton Palovaara is a trader-turned founder, publisher, and data analyst focused on leverage, margin, futures, and derivatives education. He founded Leverage.Trading in 2022 as an independent risk-first educational and analytics hub.