Two market realities keep colliding in crypto: upside reflexivity and downside illiquidity. The former pulls traders into long leverage; the latter punishes it when volatility snaps back.
Across both on-chain lending and perpetuals, long positions increasingly account for the bulk of forced unwinds in selloffs. That pattern matters because cascades are mechanical: once collateral health drops, liquidators don’t hesitate.
This piece maps why longs are the weak link, what May’s wipeouts revealed, and how to reduce the chance that a routine dip becomes a portfolio event.
PointDetails Liquidations skew longRecent drawdowns saw the majority of forced unwinds hit longs, highlighting crowding on the bullish side during risk-on stretches. Liquidity thins fastWhen volatility rises, lenders pull stablecoins and traders pull inventory, reducing bids just as margin calls accelerate. Mechanical liquidation enginesDeFi protocols liquidate on rule-based thresholds; once breached, discounts and bonuses make rapid, near-frictionless selling the rational action for bots. Funding and basis can invertRich long funding turns into discounts as price falls, flipping PnL quickly and forcing position reductions from both hedged and directional traders. Risk controls > convictionPosition sizing, conservative loan-to-value (LTV), diversified collateral, and pre-set alerts matter more than any narrative when volatility spikes.
Leverage in crypto is often applied through two channels: on-chain borrowing against volatile collateral (e.g., ETH for stablecoins) and perpetual futures with margin. In both systems, longs are structurally popular because spot scarcity narratives, staking yields, and bull-market mindshare bias positioning toward upside exposure.
DeFi lending protocols set collateral factors and liquidation thresholds. When price falls, the collateral value shrinks against the borrowed amount. Crossing the threshold triggers partial liquidation, selling the collateral (often at a discount) to repay debt. The process is blind to “value” or narrative—it is arithmetic.
Professional liquidators maintain inventory and credit to act instantly, attracted by liquidation bonuses. If books are thin, even small sales push prices further down, causing more accounts to breach thresholds—an on-chain variant of a classic margin spiral.
On perpetual venues, leveraged longs suffer mark-to-market losses as price declines. If the decline is fast, margin buffers vanish before traders can react, especially when funding flips or liquidity gaps widen. Forced market sells hit an order book already backing away, compounding slippage.
Pro tip: Treat liquidation thresholds as cliffs, not lines. Give yourself distance via lower LTV and extra margin rather than relying on reaction time.
Two late-May episodes showed how quickly conditions can flip. On May 28, roughly $958.8 million in crypto positions were liquidated over 24 hours, with about $897 million from longs versus $61 million from shorts, amid geopolitical headlines—an unmistakably long-dominated wipeout (CoinDesk).
Just days earlier, long futures traders lost around $563 million in forced liquidations in a single 24-hour span in the week ended May 17, with Bitcoin and Ether most affected (CoinDesk). The message is consistent: when markets wobble, crowded longs take the brunt.
These figures don’t claim a new regime by themselves, but they align with the structural setup: abundant long risk during calm periods, followed by systematic deleveraging when shocks hit.
Liquidity evaporates fastest right where traders expect to find it—major lending pools and top perps venues. Following the LayerZero/KelpDAO exploit, Galaxy Research reported that Aave saw over $5.5 billion of stablecoin supply outflows and about $3.1 billion of stablecoin loans closed in the subsequent two weeks, alongside withdrawals exceeding 25,400 bitcoin-based units and more than 943,000 WETH (Galaxy Research (Galaxy)).
At the same time, broader risk appetite wavered. In the week ending May 26, CoinShares-tracked investment products recorded approximately $1.47 billion of net outflows—one of the year’s largest weekly withdrawals—suggesting institutional liquidity stepping back from the tape (Yahoo Finance (reporting CoinShares data)).
When lenders and product investors retreat together, the market’s cushion thins: lenders tighten, collateral haircuts bite harder, and derivatives books must internalize more inventory risk. That makes the next leg down easier to trigger—and faster.
Pro tip: Simulate the “bad day.” If your position loses 25% and liquidity thins, do you have the margin and plan to survive? If not, resize.
Venue/MechanismTriggerWhat HappensKey Risks for Longs DeFi lenders (e.g., overcollateralized pools)Health factor/LTV breaches based on oracle pricePartial liquidations sell collateral at discount; liquidator repays debtOracle gaps; thin on-chain bids; bonus-driven over-selling CDP-style systems (vaults)Debt exceeds collateral value under set ratioAuctions or keepers liquidate collateral in batchesAuction slippage; premium for speed; unstable debt asset funding Perpetual DEXsMargin ratio falls below maintenancePosition closed at market via AMM or order bookAMM skew or order-book gaps magnify impact Centralized perpsMaintenance margin breachAuto-deleveraging or insurance fund coverageAuto-deleveraging queues in extreme moves Options (as hedge)Premium paid up front; no margin calls on long optionsLoss limited to premium on long optionsBasis risk if underlying spots gap through strikes; liquidity for exits
Across designs, liquidation logic is deterministic. The variability lies in price discovery and liquidity depth at the moment the trigger hits.
None of this requires a crash—only a sharp enough move during an illiquid window.
Pro tip: Keep a running “liquidation wall” map using publicly available dashboards and protocol risk tools. If price approaches a thick band, de-risk into it—don’t wait for the wall to hit you.
For ongoing coverage of market structure shifts and on-chain risk signals, follow updates from Crypto Daily at cryptodaily.co.uk. We track how leverage builds and unwinds so you can navigate the cycle with clearer context.
Crypto cycles spend long stretches in risk-on mode, so traders crowd into longs. When a shock hits, those positions have more notional and higher leverage on average, creating larger, faster cascades than typically seen on the short side.
When lenders withdraw stablecoins, collateral backstops shrink. If perps sell off simultaneously, borrowers can’t easily add margin or repay. That alignment turns a dip into a cross-venue deleveraging.
Bonuses incentivize immediate liquidations. During stress, multiple bots compete, selling quickly into thinning liquidity. The speed is good for protocol solvency but can push prices through more liquidation bands.
Stablecoins reduce price volatility of collateral, but they add their own risks—depegs, liquidity squeezes, and issuer/bridge exposures. Diversification and conservative sizing still apply.
Yes. Long puts or collars can cap downside without margin calls on the option itself. The trade-off is premium cost and potential basis risk if the underlying gaps through strikes.
Watch funding/basis extremes, open interest versus spot volume, changes to collateral factors, and on-chain dashboards that visualize health-factor distributions around current price.
Late-May saw long-dominated liquidations—about $897M of long positions were wiped in a single day—alongside lending outflows and product redemptions, underscoring how thin liquidity can become during macro shocks.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.


