Weekend wipeout: Crypto crash erases billions in ‘brutal reminder’ of growing risk
Market reacts to new spike in the US-China trade war with flash crash.
Bitcoin investors were celebrating last week as the cryptocurrency surged to a new record high of just over $126,000. But then came the weekend wipeout.
While some have been talking about cryptos as a safe haven akin to gold, the reaction to President Trump’s threat to impose 100% tariffs on Chinese imports was more in line with the volatility of equities during a trigger event.
The question of risk exposure among crypto investors was recently highlighted in new research which warned that younger and meme-focused investors are more likely to jump into investments without due diligence.
Bitcoin dropped from $123K on Friday to $107K on Saturday and along with ten other cryptos, the overall market lost approximately $500 billion, one of the biggest single-day slumps ever, and leveraged traders were forced to liquidate positions.
However, one trader was accused of insider trading as investors revealed the shorting of Bitcoin just 30 minutes before the crash via an account that had only just been opened. The trader is said to have netted an $88 million profit. The allegations have not been substantiated.
Nic Puckrin, crypto analyst and co-founder of The Coin Bureau, told InvestmentNews that investors should not be complacent about cryptos.
“The bloodbath we saw in markets over the weekend is a brutal reminder that, as the crypto market grows and matures, the risks are amplified,” he says. “The arrival of spot crypto ETFs and institutional interest has lulled investors into a false sense of security, but it remains the only market that trades after hours. In this environment, thin liquidity, overleverage, and the involvement of big players make for a toxic cocktail.”
Puckrin, whose site provides educational materials for crypto investors, says that the biggest shock over the weekend was that traders were forced out of even profitable positions due to auto-deleveraging on exchanges, a risk management mechanism that most will have not even heard about.
“It’s a blunt instrument that certainly deserves some scrutiny as exchanges conduct reviews of this mass liquidation event,” he explains. “At the very least, traders must be more aware of this risk before committing to leveraged or long/short trades.”
But while the weekend’s flash crash will have come as a shock to investors, Puckrin says there is a silver lining to this dark crypto cloud.
“Ironically, now that the dust has settled, many blue-chip tokens have seen a strong rebound – including Ethereum, which is looking particularly strong back above $4,000,” he notes. “As such, many spot investors find themselves in a similar position to where they were before the flash crash. This is certainly an argument against excessive leverage in a market with fluctuating liquidity in such an uncertain geopolitical climate.”
Puckrin adds that the crash has cleaned out excessive leverage and reset market risk for now, but warns that “Bitcoin now faces another uphill battle to break past key resistance levels that will allow it to reach a meaningful new all-time high this year.”