
BTC has broken $77K with 3.45% daily gains, but Coinglass shows $2.221B of longs below $73,610 and $913M of shorts above $81,264, turning the range into a leverage trap.
Summary
- Bitcoin has broken through $77,000 on Gate, with BTC/USDT last changing hands around $77,019 and up 3.45% over the past 24 hours.
- The move comes as Coinglass data show roughly $2.221 billion in BTC longs sitting below $73,610 and $913 million of shorts above $81,264, turning the $70,000–$80,000 band into a heavily levered zone.
- Traders now face a market where even a 5–7% swing can trigger multi‑billion‑dollar liquidation cascades, echoing earlier patterns around $65,000 and $68,000 flagged by Bitcoin liquidation maps.
Bitcoin (BTC) pushed through another psychological round number on Friday, with Gate’s BTC/USDT pair trading around $77,019 and posting a 24‑hour gain of 3.45% as bids continued to grind higher. The latest leg up extends a broader run that has taken BTC from the mid‑$60,000s into the high‑$70,000s over recent weeks, aided by steady spot demand and persistent futures leverage.
BTC clears $77K with liquidations looming
Derivatives data from Coinglass suggest that climb is now happening inside a tight, leveraged corridor. The platform’s liquidation‑levels dashboard shows that “if BTC falls below $73,610, the cumulative long liquidation intensity on major CEXs will reach $2.221 billion,” while a break above $81,264 would put about $913 million of short positions at risk. In other words, a few thousand dollars in either direction from current levels sit atop roughly $3.1 billion of potential forced flows.
Coinglass describes its Bitcoin liquidation heatmap as a way to “estimate price ranges where large‑scale liquidation events may occur,” aggregating leverage across venues such as Binance, OKX and Bybit. Its public materials warn that when price crosses dense liquidation bands, exchanges closing positions “may cause sharp price movements and significantly impact traders’ positions,” especially when open interest is elevated.
A recent crypto.news story on Bitcoin’s liquidation map highlighted an earlier setup around $65,000 and $68,000, where about $1.143 billion of longs and $754 million of shorts were clustered in a narrow range. At that time, Coinglass called those levels “sensitivity zones” that could turn a modest move into an outsized liquidation cascade, a pattern now re‑appearing at higher prices.
Similar leverage dynamics have been visible on Ethereum, where Coinglass data recently flagged near‑$2,000 “trapdoor” levels for longs and a $2,451 liquidation wall threatening $1.47 billion of shorts. Another crypto.news analysis of ETH liquidation walls between $2,057 and $1,863 described how densely packed futures positions can amplify even routine pullbacks.
With BTC now above $77,000, the focus for traders is whether spot demand can keep climbing without triggering the $73,610 downside “trapdoor” or a violent short squeeze beyond $81,264. Those running aggressive leverage into either band are effectively betting that they can front‑run the next liquidation wave rather than be on the wrong side of it.







