CryptoWire, SINGAPORE: Bitcoin fell below the closely watched $88,000 level on January 25, 2026, accelerating losses across crypto markets and triggering heavy forced selling in derivatives. The world’s largest cryptocurrency slid to an intraday low of about $86,284, down roughly 3.2% on the day at the low point, after breaking through $88,000 in early Asian hours.

The move coincided with a sharp rise in liquidations of leveraged positions. About $315 million worth of crypto futures positions were liquidated over roughly four hours, data from CoinGlass showed, as price declines forced automatic closures of trades. Liquidations are typically concentrated in highly leveraged contracts, where margin requirements can prompt rapid sell orders when prices fall.
Bitcoin later traded around the high $87,000s, after dipping under $88,000. Market pricing during U.S. afternoon hours showed Bitcoin near $87,800, reflecting a decline of about 2% over 24 hours at that time, according to widely tracked market data. The break below $88,000 was widely monitored by traders as a key technical area in recent trading ranges.
The sell-off spread to major alternative cryptocurrencies. Ether fell about 5.2% on the day at one point, while Solana dropped roughly 7.1%, as broader risk appetite weakened across digital assets. The declines came amid heightened volatility in crypto markets, where price swings can be amplified by derivatives activity and automated trading tied to predefined thresholds.
Major Liquidations Hit Derivatives Markets
CoinGlass data indicated that the liquidation surge was driven largely by long positions, where traders had bet on rising prices. When prices moved sharply lower, exchanges automatically closed positions that no longer met margin requirements. Such cascades can intensify short-term moves, especially when multiple venues register simultaneous liquidations and stop-loss orders are triggered across spot and futures markets.
The drop below $88,000 also marked the latest setback in a broader pullback from late-2025 highs. Bitcoin was down significantly from an October 2025 peak near $124,000, according to price figures cited by market trackers. The decline from that period has unfolded amid uneven trading conditions, with sharp rallies and reversals that have periodically tested major support levels.
Crypto trading volumes and derivatives positioning have remained central to recent price action, with traders closely watching liquidation prints and open interest for signs of stress. In prior sessions, thin liquidity during certain time zones has contributed to outsized moves, as fewer orders can widen price gaps and accelerate declines once key levels are breached.
Where Bitcoin Traded After the Drop
After falling toward the mid-$86,000 area, Bitcoin recovered modestly but remained below $90,000 in subsequent trading, leaving markets focused on whether selling pressure would persist. Ether and Solana also stayed lower on the session, keeping the broader crypto complex under pressure as traders assessed the impact of the liquidation wave and the day’s sharp move through $88,000.
