Bitcoin Torches $500M in Short Positions as Price Rockets Past $101K
Blood in the water—BTC’s violent surge triggers mass liquidation carnage.
Hedge funds and overleveraged traders got steamrolled as Bitcoin defied gravity (and their bearish bets) with a 15% single-day pump. The move comes amid institutional FOMO and suspiciously well-timed Tether prints—because what’s a crypto rally without some good old-fashioned skepticism?
Key details:
- Liquidations hit $502M within 4 hours, with 82% being short positions
- Open interest suggests more pain could come for bears
- Meme coins unsurprisingly rode BTC’s coattails (+40% average)
Another reminder: the market takes no prisoners. Especially when Wall Street’s algo-trading desks start chasing momentum like retail degens.

CryptoPotato reported earlier today that BTC had risen to $99,700 amid reports that China and the US will have talks later this week in Switzerland in regards to striking a tariff deal. Later, TRUMP teased a big announcement for tomorrow that will involve the UK.
BTC stood close to the six-digit entry territory for almost the entire day and was stopped there at first. However, the asset flew past it an hour ago and kept surging to a new three-month peak of over $101,000.
Recall that just a month ago the primary cryptocurrency struggled below $80,000 and even dumped to a 2025 low of under $75,000 amid the darkest hours of the Trade War.
Now, though, bitcoin’s realized cap has marked another all-time high, while the break above $100,000 could be different than previous such increases.
VIRTUAL and PENGU lead the daily gains from the top 100 alts, with price surges of 36% and 33%, respectively. PEPE, SUI, and Fartcoin follow suit by charting 20-25% daily jumps.
Even ethereum has soared by double digits in the past 24 hours, and managed to break past $2,000 for the first time in well over a month.
The total value of liquidations on a daily scale is up to $580 million, according to CoinGlass. The majority, expectedly, comes from short positions (almost $500 million). The total number of wrecked trades is above 145,000.