Bitcoin Falls Below $108K Amid $320M Liquidations as Excess Leverage Gets Flushed Out
More than $320 million in liquidations hit as bitcoin slipped under $108,000 and total crypto market value fell 3.2%

What to know:
- CoinGlass reported 122,919 traders liquidated in 24 hours totaling $320.32 million; the largest was a $2.98 million ETH-USDT order on Binance.
- U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs saw a $40.4 million net outflow Monday, including $100.7 million from BlackRock’s IBIT, according to Farside Investors.
- Among the majors, TRX fell the least (-1.1%) and XRP’s decline (-2.2%) was relatively small compared with peers.
Bitcoin was trading below $108,000 at 9:20 a.m. UTC as $320 million in liquidations and spot crypto ETF outflows hit a market down 3.2%.
BTC was trading at $107,779 during the European morning, 2.8% lower in the last 24 hours, according to CoinDesk data. Ether
The CoinDesk 20 Index (CD20), which offers a weighted measure of the digital asset market, is about 3.5% lower.
CoinGlass data shows 122,919 traders were liquidated in the past 24 hours, totaling $320.32 million, including a single $2.98 million ETH-USDT order on Binance.
Flows started the week softer: U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs saw a $40.4 million net outflow Monday, Oct. 20, including $100.7 million from BlackRock’s IBIT, according to Farside Investors.
Sentiment sat in “Fear” at 34 on the Crypto Fear & Greed Index.
Bloomberg reported gold at $4,270 an ounce, a drop of 1.97% today.
Glassnode said open interest (OI) fell about 30%, flushing excess leverage and that funding is near neutral, leaving the market less vulnerable to another liquidation cascade.
OI is the number of outstanding futures and perpetual contracts; when it drops sharply, it usually means leverage has been closed out. Funding is the fee longs or shorts pay to keep perpetual positions open; when it moves toward neutral, it signals neither side is paying a premium, so positioning is more balanced.
In practice, less leverage and near-neutral funding can reduce the odds of another forced-selling cascade, even if price action stays choppy.
Analyst Michaël van de Poppe said on X that bitcoin’s monthly chart is moving sideways — no clear peak or bottom — before a bigger move higher. In plain terms, he sees this phase as a pause long enough to shake out excess leverage while price holds a broad range, with the next strong advance more likely once that base-building is done.