The numbers are staggering, even for an industry tempered by volatility. In a single, brutal weekend, the cryptocurrency… The post $2.5Bn Bitcoin leverage flushThe numbers are staggering, even for an industry tempered by volatility. In a single, brutal weekend, the cryptocurrency… The post $2.5Bn Bitcoin leverage flush

$2.5Bn Bitcoin leverage flush is a reset, not a funeral – Heritage Falodun

5 min read

The numbers are staggering, even for an industry tempered by volatility. In a single, brutal weekend, the cryptocurrency market weathered a historic storm that flushed out over $2.5 billion in leveraged positions. The total market capitalisation haemorrhaged nearly 5% of its value in under 24 hours, an event that, in terms of sheer liquidation velocity, rivals the darkest days of the FTX collapse and the COVID-19 pandemic.

​Bitcoin, the bellwether of the digital asset class, pierced the psychological floor of $75,000, recording lows of about 13% over the past seven days, erasing months of gains and plunging the Fear and Greed Index into “Extreme Fear”. Ethereum shed nearly 22%, and even gold, the traditional safe haven, stumbled.

​To the uninitiated, this sea of red signals a structural failure, the bursting of a bubble. But to seasoned veterans, the chaos signals something entirely different: a necessary, albeit painful, maturation event.

The weekend $2.5Bn Bitcoin leverage flush is a reset, not a funeral – Heritage FalodunBitcoin price dip

To separate signals from noise, I spoke with Heritage Falodun, CEO of DigiOat and a seasoned Bitcoin trader with deep roots in the emerging markets, particularly Africa. His reading of the crash is blunt but far from pessimistic.

​“What we’re witnessing is not a structural failure of Bitcoin, but a classic liquidity-driven reset,” explains Falodun. “It is one that historically reappears whenever excess leverage builds faster than conviction.”

​His perspective cuts through the panic. The crash wasn’t caused by a flaw in the blockchain or a failure of the asset’s thesis; it was a punishment for greed. When traders borrow heavily to bet on price action, they create a fragile ecosystem. When the price dips, these loans are called in, forcing automatic selling, which drives the price down further, a cascade of liquidations.

​Bitcoin’s core thesis of store of value is still intact

​For investors, particularly those in markets like Africa where crypto adoption is high, the sudden correlation between Bitcoin and traditional risk assets can be jarring. If Bitcoin is “digital gold”, why does it plummet when the stock market shakes?

​According to Falodun, this is a temporary liquidity crisis, not a correlation of fundamentals. “In moments of global stress, everything liquid gets sold, not because the thesis is broken, but because liquidity is demanded,” he notes.

​Investors sell what they can, not necessarily what they want to, in order to cover margin calls elsewhere. Falodun argues that this volatility is simply the “admission price” for holding a globally neutral, non-sovereign asset. “The sell-offs test patience; the recoveries reward long-term positioning, not speed.”

The weekend $2.5Bn Bitcoin leverage flush is a reset, not a funeral – Heritage FalodunHeritage Falodun, CEO of DigiOats

​For African holders, this distinction is important; the narrative of Bitcoin as a hedge against currency fluctuations remains intact, even if the short-term price action mimics the Nasdaq. “Bitcoin has repeatedly shown that once forced selling subsides, its monetary properties reassert themselves,” Falodun affirms.

The institutional pivot: From reactive to structural

​Perhaps the most bullish signal hidden within the crash data is who isn’t selling. While retail traders were liquidated, institutional giants remained steadfast.

​“Players like BlackRock, MicroStrategy, and long-standing Bitcoin-native firms have navigated far deeper drawdowns than this,” Falodun says. “Their accumulation strategies are not reactive; they are liquidity-aware.”

​This marks a significant evolution in the market. In previous cycles, a drop of this magnitude might have scared away institutional capital. Today, these firms view volatility as a liquidity event, an opportunity to buy assets at a discount from forced sellers. 

​Furthermore, the buyer base is expanding beyond public companies. Falodun points to a quiet but massive shift in market dynamics: “We are now seeing sustained accumulation from sovereign-aligned entities and nation-state-adjacent actors.”

​This is the structural bid; when nation-states or sovereign wealth funds begin accumulating Bitcoin, they do not trade with the fickleness of a retail speculator or the quarterly pressure of a public CEO. They buy with a multi-decade horizon. This fundamentally alters Bitcoin’s demand dynamics, reducing the market’s reliance on any single institutional buyer or hype cycle.

The weekend $2.5Bn Bitcoin leverage flush is a reset, not a funeral – Heritage Falodun

​So, is this the end of the bull run? The data suggests the opposite. By wiping out $2.5 billion in leverage, the market has effectively cleaned house. The speculative froth has been blown off, leaving the asset in the hands of holders with higher conviction.

​As Falodun concludes, “This event looks less like the end of a cycle and more like a leverage reset, one that historically clears the runway for stronger hands to absorb supply before continuation.”

​The storm was violent, and the losses for leveraged traders were real. But for the spot holder looking at the horizon, the crash wasn’t a funeral for crypto but a massive transfer of wealth from the impatient to the convicted, a changing of the guard that may have just paved the way for the next leg up.

The post $2.5Bn Bitcoin leverage flush is a reset, not a funeral – Heritage Falodun first appeared on Technext.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Victra Named 2025 Recipient of Verizon’s Best Build Compliance Award

Victra Named 2025 Recipient of Verizon’s Best Build Compliance Award

Verizon Recognizes Victra for Industry-Leading Excellence in Store Design and Brand Compliance. RALEIGH, N.C., Feb. 3, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Verizon has named Victra
Share
AI Journal2026/02/03 20:49
Stablecoins could face yield compression after Fed’s rate cut

Stablecoins could face yield compression after Fed’s rate cut

The post Stablecoins could face yield compression after Fed’s rate cut appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Federal Reserve reduced its policy rate by 25 basis points to 4.00%–4.25%, the first rate cut this year. The move, framed as a response to weakening labor data, signals the start of a cautious easing cycle. Projections show two more cuts possible before year-end, with further reductions likely in 2026. Inflation remains above target, but Chairman Jerome Powell emphasized risk management over immediate price control, prioritizing stability in employment conditions. Stablecoins will be quickly affected by this. Issuers like Tether and Circle have generated large profits by holding reserves in short-term Treasuries during the high-rate environment of the past two years. That income stream now begins to erode. DeFi protocols that offered tokenized Treasury exposure face the same squeeze, with returns set to fall further if the Fed continues cutting into next year. A multi-cut easing cycle could substantially reduce stablecoin profitability, forcing issuers and protocols to adapt. The decline in dollar yields also alters the balance between holding stablecoins passively and seeking higher returns in risk assets. Bitcoin benefits most from this reallocation. As nominal rates move lower and inflation remains sticky, real yields decline, making non-yielding assets more attractive. The weaker dollar and improving risk appetite amplify the effect, positioning Bitcoin as a relative winner of the Fed’s shift. The September cut is modest, but it could bring significant changes to the crypto market. Stablecoin models built on Treasury income face structural headwinds after the rate cut, while Bitcoin and other high-beta assets stand to gain from falling real yields and increased liquidity. The Fed has opened an easing cycle, and crypto’s internal capital flows will move with it. The post Stablecoins could face yield compression after Fed’s rate cut appeared first on CryptoSlate. Source: https://cryptoslate.com/insights/stablecoins-could-face-yield-compression-after-feds-rate-cut/
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 19:31
Wormhole Jumps 11% on Revised Tokenomics and Reserve Initiative

Wormhole Jumps 11% on Revised Tokenomics and Reserve Initiative

The post Wormhole Jumps 11% on Revised Tokenomics and Reserve Initiative appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Cross-chain bridge Wormhole plans to launch a reserve funded by both on-chain and off-chain revenues. Wormhole, a cross-chain bridge connecting over 40 blockchain networks, unveiled a tokenomics overhaul on Wednesday, hinting at updated staking incentives, a strategic reserve for the W token, and a smoother unlock schedule. The price of W jumped 11% on the news to $0.096, though the token is still down 92% since its debut in April 2024. W Chart In a blog post, Wormhole said it’s planning to set up a “Wormhole Reserve” that will accumulate on-chain and off-chain revenues “to support the growth of the Wormhole ecosystem.” The protocol also said it plans to target a 4% base yield for governance stakers, replacing the current variable APY system, noting that “yield will come from a combination of the existing token supply and protocol revenues.” It’s unclear whether Wormhole will draw from the reserve to fund this target. Wormhole did not immediately respond to The Defiant’s request for comment. Wormhole emphasized that the maximum supply of 10 billion W tokens will remain the same, while large annual token unlocks will be replaced by a bi-weekly distribution beginning Oct. 3 to eliminate “moments of concentrated market pressure.” Data from CoinGecko shows there are over 4.7 billion W tokens in circulation, meaning that more than half the supply is yet to be unlocked, with portions of that supply to be released over the next 4.5 years. Source: https://thedefiant.io/news/defi/wormhole-jumps-11-on-revised-tokenomics-and-reserve-initiative
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 01:31