Bitcoin flash crashes below $78,000 at Europe market open with nearly $295 million in crypto liquidationsBitcoin traded below $78,000 on Monday as EU markets opened for the week.
BTC price hit $77,819, down 0.28% over 24 hours, with a market capitalization near $1.56 trillion and 24-hour volume of around $32.1 billion. Total crypto liquidations stood near $295 million over the previous 24 hours on CoinGlass.
Bitcoin had been pressing the $80,000 decision area, then quickly slipped back under $78,000 before any clear fresh macro, regulatory, exchange, ETF, or issuer headline had emerged.
The immediate test is whether the drop was a short-lived leverage flush or the start of a broader risk-off move.
The distinction is substantive. A leverage flush can reset crowded positioning while leaving the larger market structure intact. A broader risk-off move usually needs follow-through across risk assets, weaker liquidity, or a new catalyst that changes how traders price the next several sessions.
For now, the evidence points to market structure first. Liquidation pressure was evident, the price level was fragile, but the cause has yet to be resolved into a single clear explanation.
The $80,000 area was already loaded
The latest move landed in a zone that had already drawn attention. On Apr. 23, Bitcoin traded as high as $79,470 while moving toward the $80,000 threshold, before retracing to about $78,200.
The push was linked to forced liquidations and a more constructive macro and geopolitical setup.
Bitcoin was already testing a level where recent buyers, short sellers, and macro-sensitive traders had reasons to react. When price moves into that kind of area, the first rejection often says more about positioning than conviction.
A later CryptoSlate market-structure analysis gives the same zone a more tactical map. Bitcoin had failed to hold the upper-$78,000s after reaching the $80,000 level, while risk appetite and equities were doing more immediate work than crude oil.
The same analysis placed the constructive path around a hold of the $77,000 to $77,500 area followed by a reclaim of the upper-$78,000s.
That gives Monday's move a clean test. If buyers absorb the drop near the mid-$77,000s, the decline can remain a clearing event. If price fails there, the break starts to point to a broader reduction in risk.
The pattern also helps separate price action from explanation. Traders did not need a new headline to see why stops, hedges, or fast exits could cluster around a round-number level that had just rejected momentum. A market that has challenged $80,000 can reverse quickly when leverage is high, and the next buyer is waiting for a lower price.
That makes the first response around $77,000 to $77,500 more important than the search for a tidy headline. A fast reclaim would show demand absorbing forced flows. A stalled bounce would tell traders that the drop was spilling into spot conviction and broader risk appetite.
Recent CryptoSlate coverage explains why the $80,000 zone was crowded, why liquidations had helped shape the prior move, and why risk appetite could influence the next leg. It leaves the Apr. 27 drawdown as a live test, rather than a settled reaction to one event.
That framing separates the level from the narrative. The price zone can be real, and the catalyst can remain unresolved. Bitcoin had a clear technical pressure point, while the available evidence still leaves the trigger open.
Liquidations define what the evidence can support
The liquidation data adds pressure to that interpretation. Total crypto liquidations reached about $294.9 million over 24 hours, up sharply from the prior reading on the page.
CoinGlass also showed 89,011 traders liquidated and the largest single order on Binance's ETHUSDT pair at about $11.98 million.
The Bitcoin-specific page was more nuanced. BTC liquidations were about $95.55 million, split between about $38.8 million in longs and $56.75 million in shorts.
That split complicates the easy version of the move. A falling Bitcoin price often invites a simple long-liquidation explanation. The BTC-specific reading was short-heavy at the time checked, which suggests the liquidation backdrop was mixed and not a one-direction wipeout.
Still, liquidations were large enough to show forced position closure across the market, while the Bitcoin page showed activity clustered around the same hours as the European open. That supports a leverage and liquidity frame, with the immediate trigger still unresolved.
Market-cap data sets a second boundary. Global crypto market capitalization is near $2.59 trillion, and Bitcoin's dominance was around 60%. CryptoSlate's coins page shows Bitcoin's market capitalization is around $1.559 trillion.
Macro pressure sets the next test
The macro backdrop gives the move context. The Federal Reserve calendar shows a two-day FOMC meeting scheduled for Apr. 28 and 29, with a press conference on Apr. 29.
A separate Federal Reserve notice shows an Apr. 28 closed Board meeting to discuss monetary policy issues.
CryptoSlate's macro preview also framed the week as unusually compressed. Traders would get the Fed first, then GDP and PCE data shortly after, creating a tight test for rates, growth, inflation, and risk appetite.
That setup can explain why buyers may be less willing to step in aggressively. Bitcoin often trades as a liquidity-sensitive asset over short macro windows. When the market is heading into a packed policy and data sequence, traders have fewer reasons to add risk into a fast drop.
Still, the calendar is background pressure. During the Apr. 27 review window, no new Fed decision, fresh inflation print, regulatory action, exchange failure, ETF shock, or issuer announcement had emerged to explain the move.
The market had a plausible reason to be cautious, while the visible move looked more consistent with positioning and liquidity stress than a fully explained headline response.
The most defensible reading is that Bitcoin's drop below $78,000 looks like a leverage flush inside a risk-sensitive market, with no obvious fresh catalyst. That holds if the move stabilizes near the mid-$77,000s and buyers can push price back toward the upper-$78,000s.
A reclaim would suggest the market cleared excess exposure while preserving the larger range. It would also fit the pattern CryptoSlate mapped earlier: hold the $77,000 to $77,500 area, regain the upper-$78,000s, and put $80,000 back into play.
A deeper break would change the question. If Bitcoin loses the mid-$77,000s while equities weaken, yields firm, or the Fed week turns more hostile for risk assets, the same liquidation data would begin to resemble the first leg of a broader risk reduction.
That leaves the market with a precise test. The liquidation wave has shown where leverage was vulnerable. The next price reaction will show whether spot demand is strong enough to absorb the damage.
The post appeared first on CryptoSlate.
read the full story
Bitcoin traded below $78,000 on Monday as EU markets opened for the week.
BTC price hit $77,819, down 0.28% over 24 hours, with a market capitalization near $1.56 trillion and 24-hour volume of around $32.1 billion. Total crypto liquidations stood near $295 million over the previous 24 hours on CoinGlass.
Bitcoin had been pressing the $80,000 decision area, then quickly slipped back under $78,000 before any clear fresh macro, regulatory, exchange, ETF, or issuer headline had emerged.
The immediate test is whether the drop was a short-lived leverage flush or the start of a broader risk-off move.
The distinction is substantive. A leverage flush can reset crowded positioning while leaving the larger market structure intact. A broader risk-off move usually needs follow-through across risk assets, weaker liquidity, or a new catalyst that changes how traders price the next several sessions.
For now, the evidence points to market structure first. Liquidation pressure was evident, the price level was fragile, but the cause has yet to be resolved into a single clear explanation.
The $80,000 area was already loaded
The latest move landed in a zone that had already drawn attention. On Apr. 23, Bitcoin traded as high as $79,470 while moving toward the $80,000 threshold, before retracing to about $78,200.
The push was linked to forced liquidations and a more constructive macro and geopolitical setup.
Bitcoin was already testing a level where recent buyers, short sellers, and macro-sensitive traders had reasons to react. When price moves into that kind of area, the first rejection often says more about positioning than conviction.
A later CryptoSlate market-structure analysis gives the same zone a more tactical map. Bitcoin had failed to hold the upper-$78,000s after reaching the $80,000 level, while risk appetite and equities were doing more immediate work than crude oil.
The same analysis placed the constructive path around a hold of the $77,000 to $77,500 area followed by a reclaim of the upper-$78,000s.
That gives Monday's move a clean test. If buyers absorb the drop near the mid-$77,000s, the decline can remain a clearing event. If price fails there, the break starts to point to a broader reduction in risk.
The pattern also helps separate price action from explanation. Traders did not need a new headline to see why stops, hedges, or fast exits could cluster around a round-number level that had just rejected momentum. A market that has challenged $80,000 can reverse quickly when leverage is high, and the next buyer is waiting for a lower price.
That makes the first response around $77,000 to $77,500 more important than the search for a tidy headline. A fast reclaim would show demand absorbing forced flows. A stalled bounce would tell traders that the drop was spilling into spot conviction and broader risk appetite.
Recent CryptoSlate coverage explains why the $80,000 zone was crowded, why liquidations had helped shape the prior move, and why risk appetite could influence the next leg. It leaves the Apr. 27 drawdown as a live test, rather than a settled reaction to one event.
That framing separates the level from the narrative. The price zone can be real, and the catalyst can remain unresolved. Bitcoin had a clear technical pressure point, while the available evidence still leaves the trigger open.
Liquidations define what the evidence can support
The liquidation data adds pressure to that interpretation. Total crypto liquidations reached about $294.9 million over 24 hours, up sharply from the prior reading on the page.
CoinGlass also showed 89,011 traders liquidated and the largest single order on Binance's ETHUSDT pair at about $11.98 million.
The Bitcoin-specific page was more nuanced. BTC liquidations were about $95.55 million, split between about $38.8 million in longs and $56.75 million in shorts.
That split complicates the easy version of the move. A falling Bitcoin price often invites a simple long-liquidation explanation. The BTC-specific reading was short-heavy at the time checked, which suggests the liquidation backdrop was mixed and not a one-direction wipeout.
Still, liquidations were large enough to show forced position closure across the market, while the Bitcoin page showed activity clustered around the same hours as the European open. That supports a leverage and liquidity frame, with the immediate trigger still unresolved.
Market-cap data sets a second boundary. Global crypto market capitalization is near $2.59 trillion, and Bitcoin's dominance was around 60%. CryptoSlate's coins page shows Bitcoin's market capitalization is around $1.559 trillion.
Macro pressure sets the next test
The macro backdrop gives the move context. The Federal Reserve calendar shows a two-day FOMC meeting scheduled for Apr. 28 and 29, with a press conference on Apr. 29.
A separate Federal Reserve notice shows an Apr. 28 closed Board meeting to discuss monetary policy issues.
CryptoSlate's macro preview also framed the week as unusually compressed. Traders would get the Fed first, then GDP and PCE data shortly after, creating a tight test for rates, growth, inflation, and risk appetite.
That setup can explain why buyers may be less willing to step in aggressively. Bitcoin often trades as a liquidity-sensitive asset over short macro windows. When the market is heading into a packed policy and data sequence, traders have fewer reasons to add risk into a fast drop.
Still, the calendar is background pressure. During the Apr. 27 review window, no new Fed decision, fresh inflation print, regulatory action, exchange failure, ETF shock, or issuer announcement had emerged to explain the move.
The market had a plausible reason to be cautious, while the visible move looked more consistent with positioning and liquidity stress than a fully explained headline response.
The most defensible reading is that Bitcoin's drop below $78,000 looks like a leverage flush inside a risk-sensitive market, with no obvious fresh catalyst. That holds if the move stabilizes near the mid-$77,000s and buyers can push price back toward the upper-$78,000s.
A reclaim would suggest the market cleared excess exposure while preserving the larger range. It would also fit the pattern CryptoSlate mapped earlier: hold the $77,000 to $77,500 area, regain the upper-$78,000s, and put $80,000 back into play.
A deeper break would change the question. If Bitcoin loses the mid-$77,000s while equities weaken, yields firm, or the Fed week turns more hostile for risk assets, the same liquidation data would begin to resemble the first leg of a broader risk reduction.
That leaves the market with a precise test. The liquidation wave has shown where leverage was vulnerable. The next price reaction will show whether spot demand is strong enough to absorb the damage.
The post appeared first on CryptoSlate.
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