Liquidations
This page tracks large selloffs across major assets to identify purges, short squeezes, long flushes, and areas where the market is forcing massive exits. The goal is not just to see the numbers, but to understand the real pressure acting on the price.
Overview of detected liquidations
Liquidations are not a standalone signal, but they provide valuable institutional context. A wave of liquidated shorts can fuel a bullish extension. A series of long liquidations can, on the contrary, confirm a panic phase or a structural break in the market.
Long/Short Ratio Liquidations
This reading helps identify which side of the market is actually suffering. When a camp is massively liquidated, this often creates an exploitable asymmetry.
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If longs dominate, the market may be in a bearish fragility phase. If shorts dominate, a bullish squeeze may be underway.
Professionals look at the temporal concentration, intensity and immediate price reaction after the purge.
Current bias: Bearish Flush. Read with structure and momentum.
Stress scale
Synthetic view to identify at a glance which side of the market is under pressure.
The more unbalanced the bar, the more pressure is concentrated on one side.
Useful for detecting squeezes and capitulations before extension or rebound.
Distribution of liquidations
This graph gives an immediate reading of the prevailing pressure. It allows you to quickly see if the market has mainly cleaned up buyers or sellers over the period observed.
How to read liquidations
A liquidation represents a forced exit from a position. It becomes particularly interesting when it appears in series, on several exchanges, or when it confirms a price extension already visible on the market.
When many shorts are liquidated in a short period of time, this can fuel a bullish acceleration caused by the forced repurchase of short positions.
When many longs are liquidated, this can signal a bearish purge, often linked to excess leverage or a sharp breakout of support.
A wave of liquidations becomes much more useful when cross-referenced with key technical levels, open interest, volume and price reaction.
Priority events to monitor
The liquidations below correspond to the most important events detected over the period. They often reveal areas where the market has forced the exit of massively exposed positions.
Automatic detection of market stress
This area transforms raw data into usable reading. It helps distinguish simple market noise from a real liquidity imbalance that could produce a violent movement.
Filter events
Filters allow you to quickly isolate an asset, a side of the market, a level of impact or a number of events more suited to your analysis.
Liquidation table
Detailed table of events detected on the assets monitored, with the side liquidated, the value, the exchange concerned, the timeframe and the associated reading bias.
| Active | Side | Exchange | Price | USD Value | Quantity | Time frame | Impact | Bias | Hour |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SOL | Short | OKX | $182.40 | $5.2M | 28,500 SOL | 15m | Medium | Bullish | 24 min |
| SOL | Long | Bybit | $178.60 | $4.7M | 26,300 SOL | 5m | Medium | Bearish | 49 min |
Examples of interpretation
Here are some concrete cases to better use the information displayed on this page. The interest in liquidations lies above all in their reading combined with the behavior of the price.
A strong wave of shorts being liquidated followed by a rapid acceleration in price can signal a squeeze. This type of movement can prolong the impulse.
A strong wave of long sellouts can indicate a sudden flush. The price reaction after the purge helps distinguish capitulation from continuation.
After a wave of liquidations, observe if the market rebounds, consolidates or continues in the same direction. This is often where the real information is.
How to trade liquidations
Liquidations are useful for spotting areas of stress where the market is cleaning out overly exposed positions. They can be used as a continuation or contrarian depending on the context.
After a big wave of liquidations and price stabilization, the market can produce a violent rebound when the excess leverage has been cleaned up.
If liquidations accompany a movement already underway and the price does not reintegrate quickly, this can confirm a directional continuation.
The best opportunities often appear right after a purge, when liquidity is cleaned out and the market reveals its true direction.