Last weekend, the market for digital assets hit disarray in an extraordinary show of volatility. While traders blinked, the price of Bitcoin fell by more than $12,000–falling from near $123,000 to below $107,000 in minutes. The resulting shockwaves hit the entire ecosystem and drove other major cryptocurrencies like Ethereum and Solana down even further. This carnage created one of the largest liquidation events in history–a clear signal of the inherent risks in the fast-evolving market and, as many are realizing now, an integral design flaw in the new Wall Street-endorsed vehicles for investing.
A Historic Liquidation Cascade
The sheer scale of the financial bloodbath was unprecedented. According to market analysts, the event triggered a “cascade” of forced selling. “A flash crash of liquidations saw almost $7 billion wiped across all markets within one hour,” commented Sean Dawson, head of research at Derive.xyz. In total, data shows that over a 24-hour period, a staggering $19 billion in leveraged positions were liquidated. “Rarely does the crypto market leave you speechless,” wrote crypto analyst Lark Davis in a note to subscribers. “It’s worse than Covid and worse than [the] FTX-led market meltdown. It’s a sad day for the market and a lot of people are hurting.”
The Geopolitical Trigger
The spark that ignited this market-wide inferno was a surprise announcement from U.S. President Donald Trump, who declared a new 100% tariff on all Chinese imports. The abrupt intensification of the trade war unsettled all financial markets, but hit the constantly moving, sentiment driven crypto market especially hard. When the news broke on a Friday evening, it created a perfect storm of fear and uncertainty, which was further exacerbated by the weekend selloff and everyone de-risking their trading positions.
Wall Street’s Achilles’ Heel: The ETF Trap
This crisis may not have materially affected those holding custodial liquidity funds or futures contracts, but it shows that exchanges need to rethink their risk tolerance when managing spot Bitcoin ETFs as trusts. These funds, like BlackRock’s near-$100 billion IBIT, are traded on traditional stock exchanges and are therefore bound by their operating hours—typically 9:30 AM to 4:00 PM on weekdays. When the market went into a freefall over the weekend, ETF holders were effectively trapped. They could only look on powerless as their holdings’ value fell, with no option to sell or manage their risk until Monday morning, when the markets re-opened.
The Urgent Call for 24/7 Access
This stark disconnect between a 24/7/365 asset and a 9-to-5 investment product is now at the center of a serious industry debate. “The extreme volatility in the price of bitcoin overnight highlights why institutional investors increasingly view access to 24/7 liquidity as essential to prudent risk management,” noted Tommy Doyle, an executive at Xapo Bank. He emphasized that while ETF investors were sidelined, those with direct crypto accounts could continue to trade and protect their exposure throughout the weekend’s “seismic price moves.”
Opportunity in the Carnage?
As the dust begins to settle, some analysts are looking for a silver lining. As Markus Thielen, the co-founder and chief investment officer of 10x Research, indicated, the arrangement may have been chaotic, but a huge deleveraging event could also be “full of opportunity.” Although crashes and big deleveraging events often clear out speculative excesses and may actually help create a healthier base for future expansion, it is a harsh lesson for the millions of investors who decided to trust the “safety” and “simplicity” of ETFs. It has painfully shown that while Wall Street has made Bitcoin accessible to the masses, they haven’t fully figured out the basic issue of connecting the old-world market structure of Wall St to the 24/7/365 digital age.