NEW YORK, December 3, 2025: A broad cryptocurrency sell-off wiped out nearly $1 billion in leveraged positions within 24 hours, marking one of the largest liquidation events of the year and underscoring renewed volatility in digital asset markets. The decline reflects an accelerated unwinding of high-risk trades as investors react to tightening financial conditions and weakening sentiment across global markets. Bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency, tumbled as much as 8 percent on Monday to about $83,800 in New York trading, its lowest level since early October.

The slide extended its losses to nearly 30 percent from a recent peak near $118,000. Ethereum, the second-largest digital token, fell as much as 10 percent to $2,720, deepening a seven-week drop of more than 35 percent. Market data showed that more than $950 million in leveraged long positions were liquidated over the past day, primarily on major exchanges including Binance, OKX, and Bybit. Forced margin calls and automated sell orders accelerated the price decline across both leading and secondary tokens, triggering one of the most intense liquidation waves since midyear.
Smaller cryptocurrencies were hit hardest. An index tracking mid- and lower-cap assets among the top 100 digital tokens by market capitalization has fallen nearly 70 percent since the beginning of 2025. Liquidity on decentralized exchanges thinned sharply, while market makers reduced risk exposure as volatility surged, magnifying the effects of price swings during peak trading periods. The crypto retreat followed a broader downturn in risk assets globally. The U.S. dollar strengthened, Treasury yields climbed, and equity markets retreated at the start of December.
Nearly $1 billion in leveraged crypto positions liquidated
Rising interest rates and a cautious investor stance have weighed on speculative sectors, limiting appetite for leveraged exposure in digital markets. Data from analytics providers indicated that open interest in Bitcoin futures fell by about 15 percent since the start of the week, signaling a reduction in leverage across trading platforms. Stablecoin outflows also increased, pointing to capital movement away from digital assets toward cash and short-term holdings. Trading volumes spiked as stop-loss levels were triggered, prompting additional automated liquidations.
Despite the sharp sell-off, major exchanges operated without disruption, a contrast to earlier market crises when liquidation waves led to outages and liquidity freezes. Total cryptocurrency market capitalization has now dropped below $3 trillion, erasing roughly $400 billion in value from November levels and reversing gains tied to optimism over institutional participation and spot exchange-traded funds. As of early Tuesday in Asia, Bitcoin was trading near $84,000, while Ethereum hovered around $2,750. Other major tokens, including Solana, Avalanche, and Cardano, also recorded double-digit losses over the past week.
Stablecoin outflows indicate capital retreat to cash
The broad decline marks the steepest two-day contraction in digital asset values since 2022, underscoring the continued sensitivity of the crypto sector to leveraged positioning and global market shifts. Market observers note that while the underlying blockchain networks remain operational and transaction volumes have held steady, the latest downturn has again highlighted the dominance of speculative trading over fundamental adoption metrics. The episode reinforces how rapid liquidity withdrawals and concentrated derivatives exposure can magnify volatility across decentralized finance platforms.
With institutional interest still present but increasingly cautious, the market’s performance in coming weeks will test the resilience of trading infrastructure, liquidity provision, and investor confidence amid a more challenging global monetary environment, particularly as regulatory scrutiny intensifies and capital markets adjust to persistently high interest rates and reduced risk tolerance across major financial centers worldwide. – By CryptoWire News Desk.
