Friday’s dramatic crypto crash – one of the sharpest single-day declines in market history – might look catastrophic on the surface, but leading analysts insist it’s more of a reset than a collapse.
According to a new report from The Kobeissi Letter, the massive selloff that saw some cryptocurrencies lose up to 95% of their value in under 24 hours was driven by extreme leverage and sudden macroeconomic shocks rather than weakening fundamentals.
The analysts described the event as a “perfect storm” that hit a market already leaning heavily toward long positions. Over $16.7 billion in longs were liquidated compared to just $2.5 billion in shorts, a staggering 7-to-1 ratio that amplified the speed and severity of the drop. The collapse coincided with U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement of 100% tariffs on Chinese imports, which was made late Friday – a period notorious for thin liquidity and volatile price reactions.
“We believe this crash was the product of multiple technical factors converging at once,” the Kobeissi team wrote. “The move doesn’t reflect deteriorating fundamentals. A correction was overdue, and we remain bullish on crypto’s long-term trajectory.”
Within hours, the market saw a $20 billion wave of liquidations, wiping out 1.6 million leveraged traders and sending smaller altcoins spiraling to near-zero valuations. The total market capitalization for all crypto assets excluding Bitcoin and Ethereum (the so-called Total3 index) plunged from $1.15 trillion to roughly $766 billion before stabilizing – a fall unmatched since the collapses of FTX and Terra/LUNA.
Despite the bloodbath, several industry voices are treating the wipeout as a healthy purge. Cory Klippsten, CEO of Swan Bitcoin, told Cointelegraph that the selloff is likely flushing out “weak hands” and over-leveraged traders, laying the groundwork for a more sustainable climb later on. “These corrections often provide the fuel for the next rally,” he said.
Others remain more cautious, warning that the true damage may be deeper than liquidation figures suggest. Some traders point out that forced sales and cascading liquidations have ripple effects across lending platforms and derivatives markets that are still playing out behind the scenes.
Even so, the consensus among long-term investors is that the crash doesn’t mark the end of the bull cycle – just a brutal reminder of how fast leverage and low liquidity can turn the crypto market upside down.
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Source: https://coindoo.com/crypto-crash-was-just-a-technical-reset-not-a-meltdown-analysts-say/