Bitcoin punched through the $75,000 floor, and the derivatives market responded exactly how you’d expect: with chaos. Approximately $923 million in crypto positions were liquidated in a single day, with long traders, the ones betting on higher prices, absorbing the vast majority of the damage.
Of that total, around $834 million came from liquidated longs. The market was overwhelmingly bullish going into this move, and that crowded positioning made the unwind brutal.
A support zone under siege
The $75,000 to $77,000 range has been flagged by analysts as a critical technical support area for Bitcoin. Multiple retests of sub-$80,000 levels throughout 2026 have already weakened the structural integrity of this zone.
Earlier waves in 2026, when Bitcoin dipped into the $67,000 to $76,000 range, produced even larger wipeouts between $1.7 billion and $2 billion in forced closures. So while nearly $1 billion sounds dramatic, the market has actually seen worse in recent months.
From $124K to here
Bitcoin peaked above $124,000 back in October 2025. The correction from those highs has been steep and uneven, with a notable drop to nearly $62,800 in February 2026 marking one of the sharpest pullbacks of the cycle.
The trajectory from $124,000 to $75,000 represents a roughly 40% drawdown. Liquidation cascades create a feedback loop: forced selling pushes prices lower, which triggers more liquidations, which creates more selling.
What this means for investors
The lopsided nature of these liquidations, with longs outnumbering shorts by a wide margin, reveals something important about market sentiment heading into the drop. For anyone watching the derivatives market, two metrics are worth tracking closely right now: open interest and funding rates. Open interest tells you how much money is deployed in leveraged positions. Funding rates tell you which direction the crowd is leaning.
If Bitcoin fails to hold the $75,000 to $77,000 support zone, the February low near $62,800 is the obvious reference point below. A move toward that level would likely trigger another round of liquidations, potentially larger than this one, given the positions that would be underwater between $75,000 and $63,000.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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