Bitcoin Crash Wipes Out $109.7M in Long Positions as Outflows Dry Up and Shorts Dominate

Table of Contents Bitcoin crash activity intensified in mid-May 2026, as a combination of on-chain deterioration, aggressive short positioning, and macroeconomic triggers converged into a sharp market correction. Exchange outflows fell well below normal levels, leaving the market exposed to sell-side pressure. At the same time, derivatives traders leaned heavily into short bets, setting the stage for a brutal long liquidation event. Over three days, approximately $109.7 million in long positions were forcefully wiped out. As of May 11, total exchange outflows dropped to 19,995 BTC. That figure stood far below the early May range of 28,000 to 35,000 BTC. It also came in under the period’s daily average of 25,600 BTC. The sharp decline in withdrawal activity pointed to fading buyer conviction across the market. With inflows holding steady at 0.99x the average, the gap between outflows and inflows narrowed quickly. As a result, the exchange Netflow turned positive, meaning sell-side liquidity began accumulating on trading platforms. That shift weakened the market’s ability to absorb downward pressure. According to CryptoQuant analyst @easy_Vero, the Netflow turning positive was a clear structural red flag. The accumulation of coins on exchanges historically signals that sellers are preparing to act. In this case, that preparation aligned with worsening conditions elsewhere in the market. Why Did Bitcoin Crash? What Really Happened Inside the Market “A market weakened by falling outflows met a short-driven atmosphere and macro bad news, triggering a massive $109.7M long wipeout.” – By @easy_Vero pic.twitter.com/ZbF4NVcifI — CryptoQuant.com (@cryptoquant_com) May 14, 2026 The drop in outflows did not happen in isolation. It coincided with a derivatives market already leaning heavily to one side. Together, these factors created a fragile setup that needed only a small external shock to collapse. Between May 8 and 10, open interest gradually climbed to 1.04x the period’s average. Despite rising OI, funding rates stayed negative throughout. On May 10, the negative funding margin deepened further. That combination confirmed traders were building short leverage with growing conviction. When selling pressure finally hit, the consequences for long positions were severe. On May 12 alone, long liquidations reached 11.8 times the volume of short liquidations. Over the three-day window from May 11 to 13, a total of $109.7 million in long positions were forcefully closed. Adding fuel to the move, U.S. CPI and PPI data released around the same period brought fresh inflation concerns. Those readings rattled investor sentiment at precisely the wrong moment. The macro news acted as a direct trigger on top of an already unstable structure. Looking ahead, analysts point to two key metrics to watch. A shrinking long liquidation scale would suggest the worst of the forced selling has passed. A return of Netflow to negative territory, meaning outflows begin dominating again, would indicate renewed buyer confidence. Until both conditions materialize, price recovery is expected to remain restrained.