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One trader just lost $220 million as ETH plunged 10%

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(Coinglass)

One trader lost more than $220 million on an ether position as a fresh wave of forced liquidations swept through crypto markets, pushing total losses over the past 24 hours to nearly $2.6 billion.

The largest single liquidation occurred on decentralized derivatives exchange Hyperliquid, where an ETH-USD position worth $222.65 million was wiped out, according to CoinGlass data.

The event came as ether slid as much as 17% in the past 24 hours, sharply alongside bitcoin and other major tokens during a period of thin liquidity.

In total, 434,945 traders were liquidated over the past day, with long positions accounting for the vast majority of losses. Roughly $2.42 billion of the $2.58 billion total came from bullish bets, while shorts made up just $163 million.

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Hyperliquid saw the heaviest damage, recording $1.09 billion in liquidations — nearly all of it from long positions — accounting for more than 40% of total losses across exchanges. Bybit followed with $574.8 million in liquidations, while Binance recorded about $258 million.

Ether bore the brunt of the sell-off, with more than $1.15 billion in ETH positions liquidated in the past 24 hours. Bitcoin followed with roughly $788 million, while Solana saw close to $200 million wiped out, according to liquidation heatmap data.

(Coinglass)

(Coinglass)

Liquidations occur when leveraged positions are forcibly closed due to a price move beyond a trader’s margin threshold. This typically results in major losses and can trigger cascade effects during volatile moves.

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Traders use liquidation data to gauge market sentiment and positioning. Large long liquidations often signal panic bottoms, while short liquidations may precede a squeeze.

Spikes in liquidations also help identify overcrowded trades and potential reversals. When paired with open interest and funding rate data, liquidation metrics can offer strategic entry or exit points, especially in overleveraged markets prone to sudden flushes or rallies.

Liquidation-driven moves have become more common during periods of low liquidity, where relatively small price declines can cascade through derivatives markets.

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Crypto World

Bithumb Aims to Reappoint CEO Lee Jae-won Amid Recent Regulatory Pain

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Bithumb Aims to Reappoint CEO Lee Jae-won Amid Recent Regulatory Pain

Bithumb, South Korea’s second-largest cryptocurrency exchange by trading volume, is reportedly seeking to reappoint CEO Lee Jae-won despite recent alleged anti-money laundering failures and other controversies, according to the Korea Times.

The exchange will convene its regular shareholders’ meeting on March 31, and a proposal to keep Lee in the top job will be put to shareholders, the Korea Times reported on Sunday, citing industry sources.

His current term expires at the end of the month, and a successful renewal would keep Lee as the exchange’s CEO for another two years. Cointelegraph has contacted Bithumb for comment.

Upbit is the top South Korean crypto exchange by 24-hour trading volume, according to CoinGecko, followed by Bithumb and Korbit.

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Bithumb is South Korea’s second-largest cryptocurrency exchange by trading volume. Source: CoinGecko 

Regulators hit Bithumb with penalties

In March, South Korea’s Financial Intelligence Unit reportedly issued Bithumb a six-month partial suspension and a 36.8 billion won ($24.2 million) fine over alleged anti-money laundering failures. 

Under the measures, the exchange will be banned from processing external crypto transfers for new customers from March 27 to Sept. 26.

The exchange also drew regulatory attention in February when it mistakenly credited 2,000 Bitcoin (BTC) per user instead of 2,000 Korean won ($1.40) during a promotional event, distributing a total of 620,000 coins that it couldn’t back up.

Bithumb is also awaiting the outcome of another probe into its order book sharing with an overseas platform and more penalties could pose a hurdle to license renewals, according to the Korea Times.

“Bithumb will be on edge awaiting the results of ongoing regulatory probes, as the company still needs to renew its virtual asset service provider license,” an industry official told the Korea Times.

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Related: South Korea moves to cap crypto exchange shareholder stakes at 20%: Report

South Korean crypto industry is rising

The crypto industry in South Korea has benefited from a friendlier environment after the election of President Lee Jae-myung in June last year, who has pushed forward with various crypto-related laws, including a bill to legalize stablecoins.

Three months earlier, crypto exchange users in South Korea surpassed 16 million, representing more than 30% of the country’s population.

The cryptocurrency market in South Korea is projected to reach $1.3 billion in revenue in 2026, according to online data platform Statista.

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Magazine: China’s ‘50x’ blockchain boost, Alibaba-linked AI mines Bitcoin: Asia Express