Ethereum’s liquidation map shows an extreme short positioning imbalance, with cumulative short liquidation leverage dwarfing long exposure at current prices near $1,978.
The Coinglass ETH Exchange Liquidation Map covers a price range from roughly $1,580 to $2,467, with current price sitting at $1,978.3, marked by the red dashed vertical line near the centre of the chart.
Two cumulative lines run across the chart.
Source: https://www.coinglass.com
The red line tracking cumulative long liquidation leverage starts high on the left side of the chart, above $350 million, and slopes downward consistently as price moves right toward current levels. That declining red line means long liquidation pressure has been largely absorbed. Most leveraged longs below current price have already been wiped out.
The green line tracking cumulative short liquidation leverage tells the opposite story. It starts low on the left and curves sharply upward to the right, reaching $5.51 billion at the far right of the chart. The higher price goes, the more short positions get liquidated. That $5.51 billion sitting above current price represents compressed fuel for a short squeeze if price moves up.
The individual bars show exchange-specific liquidation clusters by price level, broken down across Binance in orange, OKX in yellow, and Bybit in blue. The largest single bar cluster sits just above current price around $2,057, representing the densest concentration of short liquidations immediately above the market.
The ratio reported by Coinglass is stark. Over 12 times more ETH short leverage exists than long leverage at current price levels. That kind of imbalance creates an asymmetric setup in either direction.
In one scenario, a short squeeze. If price pushes above $2,057 and triggers the dense liquidation cluster visible on the chart, forced buying from short closures could accelerate the move rapidly. The $5.51 billion in cumulative short liquidation leverage sitting above current price is the fuel for that scenario.
In the other scenario, the shorts are right. If price continues lower, the long liquidation pressure visible on the left side of the chart has already been cleared, meaning there is limited forced selling below. But the sheer volume of short positioning also means the market has a strong directional consensus betting on further downside.
This data sits alongside the multi-cycle trendline analysis covered earlier this week. Crypto Tice identified the current ETH level as hold or collapse, with the weekly close as the deciding event. The liquidation map adds a mechanical layer to that structural argument. A hold and recovery scenario has $5.51 billion in short liquidations sitting above price that could amplify any upside move. A breakdown scenario clears through a long side that has already been largely liquidated.
The positioning is extreme. Extreme positioning resolves fast when it moves.
The post There Are 12 Times More ETH Shorts Than Longs: Here Is What That Means for Price appeared first on ETHNews.


