Key Takeaways
- Cryptocurrency market lost over $19 billion in historic crash
- Trump’s 100% China tariffs triggered massive sell-off
- Bitcoin plunged 12% from record highs, Ethereum followed
- Binance outage and technical issues amplified market chaos
The cryptocurrency market witnessed its largest liquidation event in history on Saturday, with over $19 billion wiped out following former US President Donald Trump’s announcement of 100% tariffs on China. The dramatic sell-off saw Bitcoin and Ethereum plunge as investors fled to safer assets amid renewed trade war fears.
Historic Market Meltdown
Data tracker Coinglass described the event as “the largest liquidation event in crypto history,” with more than 1.6 million traders liquidated within 24 hours. Over $7 billion in positions were sold in less than one hour on Friday alone, though actual losses may be significantly higher due to reporting limitations.
Bitcoin suffered a 12% decline, falling from its record high of over $125,000 earlier in the week to below $113,000 by Saturday morning in London. Ethereum followed a similar downward trajectory as traders rushed to exit positions.
Exchange Chaos Amplifies Crisis
The market turmoil was compounded by technical issues at Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange. Users reported frozen accounts, failed stop-loss orders, and flash crashes that briefly sent altcoins like Enjin (ENJ) and Cosmos (ATOM) to near-zero prices before they recovered.
Binance attributed the disruption to “heavy market activity” and assured users that “funds are SAFU,” but critics alleged the outage worsened the crash and allowed the exchange to profit during liquidations. Similar issues were reported on Coinbase and Robinhood.
Expert Warnings and Market Contagion
Market experts expressed concern about potential broader contagion. Brian Strugats of Multicoin Capital noted the focus has shifted to “counterparty exposure and whether this triggers broader market contagion,” with some estimates suggesting total liquidations could exceed $30 billion.
Caroline Mauron, co-founder of Orbit Markets, warned that $100,000 represents the next critical support level for Bitcoin. “A drop below this would signal the end of the past three-year bull cycle,” she stated, with Deribit data showing concentrated put options at $110,000 and $100,000 levels.
Broader Financial Market Impact
The escalating US-China trade tensions affected multiple asset classes, rattling stocks, oil, and commodities while boosting demand for traditional safe havens like Treasuries and gold.
Ravi Doshi of FalconX reported “outsized demand for downside protection” reflecting widespread market uncertainty. David Jeong of Tread.fi characterized the event as a “black swan,” noting that leveraged perpetual futures amplified losses for institutional traders.
Vincent Liu of Kronos Research summarized: “The rout was sparked by US-China tariff fears but fuelled by institutional over-leverage. This highlights crypto’s sensitivity to macroeconomic developments.”




