The Ethereum (ETH) derivatives landscape is currently undergoing aggressive deleveraging as the post-ATH correction deepens. For example – Open interest collapsed from $33.3 billion to approximately $11 billion, reflecting a 66% contraction in leveraged exposure.
Such movement has occurred on major centralized exchanges, with futures positioning generating directional liquidity.
Source: CryptoQuant
At the time of writing, Binance led the contraction with a decline of 68.2%, while OKX fell 63.5% and Bybit recorded the largest decline of 72.6%. Liquidations triggered much of this decline, with traders positioned against the downtrend facing forced exits.
Simultaneously, the drop in the price of ETH from over $4,000 to $1,900 also mechanically reduced the notional value of the contracts.

Source: CryptoQuant
Macroeconomic uncertainty and Bitcoin (BTC) weakness have further suppressed risk appetite, prompting traders to preemptively close their positions.
This contraction reshaped the market structure by eliminating excess leverage and weakening derivatives-induced selling pressure. And yet, this can also be seen as evidence of a feeling of fragility. Especially as participants abandon speculative leverage and adopt cautious, cash-anchored positioning until confidence recovers.
Liquidation Heatmap Shows Long Squeeze Near $1.9K as Leverage Resets
Ethereum’s recent wave of open interest has occurred alongside liquidation clusters visible on Binance’s ETH/USDT pair.
As prices fall sharply, long positions trigger cascading margin calls, accelerating forced exits. Its wave aligned with market-wide liquidations, which totaled about $189 million over 24 hours, amplifying volatility.

Source: CoinGlass
During the sell-off, price moved through dense leverage pockets near $1,950 and approached the $1,900 area where liquidation bands intensified. Previous bearish phenomena have highlighted similar pressure zones between $1,800 and $2,000, reinforcing structural vulnerability in this corridor.
However, as the selloffs subsided, the intensity moderated and the positioning stabilized. In fact, recent activity has revealed reduced cluster dominance despite high turnover, signaling a reduction in excessive debt.
Such a transition involves partial structural cleaning. Traders can now adopt lower leverage ratios and more defensive positioning, while systemic risk decreases relative to peak liquidation phases, thereby promoting near-term stabilization.
Ethereum’s pullback towards $1,950 coincided with aggressive on-chain absorption as investors withdrew their supply from exchanges. Reserves have declined steadily, reaching 16.1 million ETH – marking a multi-year low. Such a decline occurred following sustained capitulation selling driven by ETF outflows and macroeconomic pressure.

Source: CryptoQuant
Coming out of weak hands, long participants accumulated approximately 25 million ETH through early and mid-February.
Meanwhile, the price stabilized in the $1,900-$2,000 range as inventory on the sell side decreased. For now, the reduction in foreign exchange balances has mitigated the immediate distribution risk. However, moderate demand for ETFs could temper the bullish momentum.
This pattern may be a sign of cautious confidence and not risky behavior. Especially as large investors prepare for long-term growth while short-term price fluctuations slowly diminish.
Final summary
- Leverage has been aggressively purged in Ethereum derivatives markets, easing forced selling pressure while leaving sentiment cautious.
- Simultaneous currency outflows and deep supply absorption tighten liquid stocks, stabilizing the $1,900 area.


