
Crypto futures traders have absorbed more than $1 billion in long liquidations since May 10, showing how quickly bullish leverage was cleared as Bitcoin lost support and broader risk appetite weakened.
The latest liquidation tracking from Axel Adler Jr. places total long liquidations at $1.03 billion over the period. The heaviest damage came between May 15 and May 17, when $703 million in long positions were liquidated. That three-day window accounted for about 68% of the full liquidation volume since May 10.

The concentration of losses shows that the market was not simply grinding lower. A large part of the leverage reset came in one sharp cluster, where crowded long positioning met forced selling, margin calls and thinner liquidity. Once Bitcoin began moving against leveraged buyers, exchanges automatically closed underwater positions, adding sell pressure into the same move that triggered the liquidations.
Bitcoin is trading near $74,610, down about 3.6% over 24 hours, with a daily range between roughly $74,478 and $77,434. The move has pushed BTC below the $77,000 area that traders had been watching closely as exchange-linked selling pressure built across the market.
That same zone had already been under scrutiny after Bitcoin’s $77,000 range came back under stress from weaker spot demand and exchange-side flows. The latest liquidation data adds the derivatives side of the same story: longs were not only losing mark-to-market value, they were being forced out.
Liquidations can clean up crowded positioning, but they also reveal where traders were overexposed. A $1.03 billion long wipeout means many buyers entered the move with too much leverage, too little margin or stop levels clustered near the same price zones.
That can make the next phase cleaner. If forced selling slows and spot buyers defend the mid-$70,000 area, Bitcoin can stabilize after the leverage flush. If BTC keeps losing support, the market may treat the liquidation cluster as the first stage of a deeper risk-off move rather than the end of the correction.
The May 15 to 17 concentration is the number to watch because it shows where pressure was most intense. Nearly seven out of every ten dollars in long liquidations since May 10 happened in that window. A market that clears that much leverage in three days can rebound sharply if shorts become crowded, but it can also remain heavy if ETF outflows, exchange deposits and weak macro liquidity keep sellers active.
The current setup leaves Bitcoin with a narrow technical map. Holding above $74,000 keeps the market from turning the liquidation flush into a larger breakdown. A recovery back above $77,000 would show buyers are absorbing the forced-selling damage. A move back through $78,000 would put pressure on late shorts and improve the chance of a relief rally.
A clean break below $74,000 would shift attention toward the next liquidity pockets under the market. After a $1.03 billion long flush, the most important signal is no longer the headline liquidation total. It is whether spot demand returns before another leverage cluster forms below current price.
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