Ethereum is edging toward a high‑risk liquidation zone where a clean break above $2,451 would put an estimated $1.473 billion of short positions at risk across major centralized exchanges, according to derivatives tracker Coinglass.
- Coinglass data shows $1.47b in ETH shorts at risk if price breaks $2,451.
- A drop below $2,220 could trigger $1.10b in long liquidations on major CEXs.
- Ethereum trades just below these key bands as leverage builds across futures markets.
Ethereum is edging toward a high‑risk liquidation zone where a clean break above $2,451 would put an estimated $1.473 billion of short positions at risk across major centralized exchanges, according to derivatives tracker Coinglass.
The same data set shows that if Ethereum reverses and falls below $2,220, roughly $1.099 billion in long positions could be flushed out in a cascading sell‑off as exchanges force‑close underwater trades.
As of late Tuesday, ETH is trading around $2,375, leaving both levels within striking distance and underscoring how tightly leveraged the market has become around current prices.
Coinglass maps $2,451 and $2,220 “liquidation bands”
On its Ethereum liquidation dashboard, Coinglass states that “if ETH breaks through $2,451, the cumulative short liquidation intensity on major CEXs will reach $1.473 billion,” flagging the zone as a potential short‑squeeze pocket for futures traders.
Coinglass adds that “if ETH falls below $2,220, the cumulative long liquidation intensity on major CEXs will reach $1.099 billion,” marking out a mirrored risk area where over‑leveraged longs could be forced out.
The platform’s liquidation heatmaps aggregate futures and perpetual swap positioning from venues such as Binance, OKX and Bybit to show where “large‑scale liquidation events may occur” once spot price collides with stacked leverage.
These clustered bands can act as both magnets and accelerants: once triggered, forced buying or selling often drives price beyond the initial level, a behavior seen repeatedly in past Ethereum liquidation cascades covered in a previous crypto.news story on derivatives stress.
Stablecoin rails, HKDAP and Ethereum’s role
The build‑up of leverage on Ethereum comes as the network remains a core settlement layer for stablecoins and tokenized real‑world assets, sectors that regulators and banks are now moving to bring on‑chain in size.
In a recent crypto.news story on Animoca‑backed Anchorpoint’s planned HKDAP stablecoin, Hong Kong officials described their new Stablecoins Ordinance as a way to create “a secure tokenised medium of exchange for the digital economy and to facilitate international payments and capital flows,” while avoiding the opacity that has plagued some dollar‑pegged tokens as supply has climbed above $300 billion.
Animoca Brands group president Evan Auyang told Chinese outlet National Business Daily that “stablecoins are the bridge between native and enterprise Web3” and argued that “mainland assets going global need a Hong Kong dollar stablecoin,” calling such a coin “crucial for Hong Kong’s financial infrastructure” and vital to “games, trade, and 24/7 financial settlement.”
As explored in earlier crypto.news coverage of stablecoin rails and card payments, deep, always‑on dollar and HKD liquidity now serves as collateral and margin across perpetual futures platforms, meaning liquidation clusters like the current $2,451 and $2,220 bands can reverberate beyond traders into DeFi funding and cross‑border payment flows built on Ethereum.

