Mega liquidations shake crypto's core
The cryptocurrency market faced a dramatic downturn in early February, with both bitcoin and ether suffering steep declines that triggered massive liquidations across trading desks.
This sharp correction forced major players to unwind leveraged positions. Trend Research, led by Jack Yi, had built a $2 billion bullish bet on ether by borrowing stablecoins against ETH collateral on Aave. As prices tumbled, the firm was compelled to liquidate over 300,000 ETH—moving 332,000 ETH worth approximately $700 million to Binance within five days to repay debt. The result was a staggering $686 million loss for Trend Research and a near-total wipeout of their ether holdings; they now retain just 1.463 ETH.
Ether's price reached a low of $1,750 on February 4, its weakest level since April 2025.
The forced sales by large entities amplified selling pressure and contributed to further price declines throughout the market.
Record options bets signal panic
During Thursday’s crash, options activity on BlackRock’s spot bitcoin ETF (IBIT) exploded to unprecedented levels. According to coindesk.com, IBIT options volume soared to 2.33 million contracts in one day—an all-time high—with puts (bets on further downside) narrowly outpacing calls. The demand for protection against falling prices was so intense that options buyers paid a record $900 million in premiums during the session, a sum equivalent to the market capitalization of several mid-tier crypto tokens.
On paper these premiums represent hedging activity, but some market watchers speculated about a hedge fund blowup behind the scenes.
While one analyst claimed that these outsized premium payments were linked to a major hedge fund’s collapse due to heavy IBIT exposure, others disputed this explanation. What is clear is that fear dominated trading desks as volatility spiked and investors scrambled for protection against further losses.
$900M premiums: fear or opportunity?
The sheer scale of Thursday’s options activity underscored just how rapidly sentiment shifted from greed to fear. The Crypto Fear and Greed Index plunged into single digits—a territory reached only a handful of times in bitcoin’s 17-year history—mirroring panic seen at previous cycle bottoms. Simultaneously, bitcoin became the third most oversold it has ever been based on the Relative Strength Index (RSI), signaling extreme short-term pessimism among traders.
With roughly 10 million BTC now held at a loss and another 10 million still in profit, supply metrics have nearly converged—a pattern typically observed at major market turning points such as those in 2015, 2019, and late 2022.
Ether whales forced to capitulate
For ether holders with leveraged bets, the selloff brought swift consequences. Trend Research’s liquidation of over 300,000 ETH was described by Jack Yi as a risk-control measure rather than outright capitulation. However, with losses totaling $686 million and their position reduced from hundreds of thousands of ETH to just over one token after repaying Aave loans via Binance transfers, the scale of forced selling was impossible to ignore.
Despite these setbacks, Yi stated publicly that his firm remains optimistic about both bitcoin and ether reaching new highs in the future—a stance echoed by some long-term investors who see deep drawdowns as potential accumulation opportunities rather than signals of permanent defeat.
Yet optimism alone cannot erase realized losses or restore lost capital overnight.
Flash crash exposes exchange fragility
Even as global markets reeled from forced liquidations and record options activity, an unrelated incident on South Korean exchange Bithumb highlighted another form of systemic vulnerability. A software error mistakenly credited users with 2,000 BTC each instead of a small reward worth just $1.50 (about 2,000 Korean won). This led hundreds of accounts to show tens of millions in phantom bitcoin balances overnight—even though no actual BTC moved onchain.
When users rushed to sell these nonexistent assets, Bithumb’s BTC/KRW price crashed nearly 16% below other exchanges—trading briefly at just $55,000 while global prices remained stable.
Bithumb quickly froze affected accounts after detecting abnormal transactions through internal controls and later confirmed there was no hack or external breach involved. Customer assets remain secure according to Bithumb officials; however, the episode demonstrates how technical glitches can trigger flash crashes independent of broader market trends.
Next support: bargain hunters or freefall?
As both bitcoin and ether approach key technical levels—the former hovering near its 200-week moving average around $58,011—the market faces an inflection point between renewed accumulation and deeper declines. With long-term holders now sitting on unrealized losses for over 4.6 million BTC (a figure last seen at bear-market lows), some see parallels with past bottoming events where capitulation set the stage for recovery.
But while metrics suggest exhaustion among sellers and historic levels of oversold conditions, it remains uncertain whether bargain hunters will step in forcefully enough to reverse momentum or if further pain lies ahead before stability returns. For now, big players have taken big hits—and smaller investors are left weighing risk versus reward amid ongoing volatility.
Key Takeaways
- •Trend Research lost $686 million after liquidating over 300,000 ETH as ether fell to $1,750 on February 4, 2025.
- •BlackRock’s bitcoin ETF (IBIT) saw a record 2.33 million options contracts traded and $900 million in premiums paid during Thursday’s crash.
- •Bitcoin’s price dropped over $10,000 to around $62,000 on February 5, marking its largest single-day decline since November 2022.
What remains to be seen
If bitcoin’s price falls below its 200-week moving average of $58,011, it would mark a breach of a historically significant support level that has only been crossed during major bear market lows, but whether this occurs in the aftermath of the Feb. 5 crash remains unclear.

