Binance says macro shock, not exchange failure, drove October’s $19B liquidation cascade

Binance has published a detailed post-mortem of the 10 October 2025 crypto market flash crash, arguing that the $19 billion liquidation wave was primarily triggered by macroeconomic shocks and market-wide risk controls rather than exchange-specific failures.

The exchange said the event, known internally as the “10/10 incident,” unfolded amid renewed trade-war headlines, rising global bond yields, and broad equity-market weakness.

The event collectively triggered rapid deleveraging across crypto derivatives markets.

Clarification follows criticisms

Binance’s clarification follows weeks of market speculation and public criticism after the October crash. The exchange was widely cited on social media and in analyst commentary as a potential contributor to the liquidation cascade. 

Some traders pointed to temporary price dislocations, index behavior, and user-reported interface issues as evidence of exchange-side failures. 

Binance’s report appears aimed at directly addressing those claims, laying out a timeline of events to distinguish between market-wide deleveraging and the platform-specific incidents it acknowledges occurred later in the volatility window.

Liquidations peaked before Binance-specific issues emerged

According to Binance, the most intense phase of liquidations occurred before 21:36 UTC, when two localized technical issues briefly affected parts of its platform. 

The exchange said roughly 75% of total industry liquidations had already taken place by that point.

10 October liquidation data10 October liquidation data

Source: Coinglass

Liquidation data from CoinGlass supports the scale of the move. At 01:00 UTC on 10 October, total liquidations reached $19.25 billion, with long positions accounting for the majority of forced closures.

At that peak:

  • Binance saw approximately $1.39 billion in long liquidations and $965 million in short liquidations
  • Hyperliquid recorded $9.29 billion in long liquidations
  • Bybit saw more than $4.3 billion in long liquidations
  • OKX registered over $1.07 billion in long liquidations

The concentration of losses across multiple venues points to a systemic leverage unwind rather than a single-exchange failure.

Two incidents acknowledged, impact described as limited

While denying responsibility for the broader crash, Binance acknowledged two platform-specific incidents during the volatility window.

The first involved a temporary degradation of its asset transfer subsystem between Spot, Earn, and Futures accounts from 21:18 to 21:51 UTC, caused by database performance strain under surge load. 

Some users briefly saw zero balances in the interface, though Binance said actual funds were unaffected.

The second incident occurred between 21:36 and 22:15 UTC, when abnormal index price deviations were recorded for USDe, WBETH, and BNSOL. Binance said these deviations contributed to some margin calls and liquidations on affected pairs, particularly in thin liquidity conditions.

The exchange said it has since tightened deviation thresholds and improved cross-exchange reference pricing. Also, it said it had enhanced circuit breakers to reduce recurrence risk.

Exchange frames crash as stress test for leverage

Binance described the October flash crash as a stress test of the crypto market’s structure under extreme macro pressure. It pointed to market-maker risk controls and leverage concentration as key amplifiers of volatility.

The exchange said it has since expanded stress testing, strengthened monitoring for database performance during volatility spikes. Also, it increased capacity planning for future market shocks.


Final Thoughts

  • The October flash crash shows how macro shocks can rapidly cascade through highly leveraged crypto markets, regardless of individual exchange stability.
  • Binance’s disclosures highlight the growing importance of index design, liquidity depth, and cross-venue risk controls amid elevated leverage.

 

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Source: https://ambcrypto.com/binance-says-macro-shock-not-exchange-failure-drove-octobers-19b-liquidation-cascade/