As the third quarter of 2026 begins, cryptocurrency markets are experiencing a significant drop in leverage and liquidity. This shift follows a turbulent second quarter marked by substantial liquidations and diminishing demand. Amid this backdrop, market players are cautious, navigating an environment defined by reduced speculative activities.
What Sparked the Drop in Open Interest?
The reduction in open interest can primarily be attributed to substantial liquidation events. Data from Talos, a well-regarded institutional data provider, indicates that Bitcoin and Ether long positions saw liquidations amounting to $8.35 billion in Q2. Alongside this, outflows from Bitcoin ETFs continued, with declines in stablecoin supply further indicating waning enthusiasm.
Open interest in Bitcoin futures fell 32% from its second-quarter pinnacle, settling at $33.5 billion, while Ether’s open interest plunged 40% to $16.2 billion. These figures highlight a pronounced retreat from leveraged positions.
Talos emphasized that the liquidation wave has reduced leveraged capital in the market, potentially limiting the risk of cascading forced sales but making price moves more volatile in less liquid trading conditions.
How Does Reduced Liquidity Affect Volatility?
Lower leverage does not equate to a stabilized market. Talos highlights a decreased depth in order books, which diminishes the market’s capacity to withstand selling pressures. Consequently, any significant trades could trigger steep price fluctuations due to the thinner liquidity.
The 2% order book depth for Bitcoin, a critical liquidity indicator, reduced from approximately $70 million in early May to a range of $35 to $40 million by late June. Spot exchange volumes mirrored this trend, dropping 28% to $2.32 trillion.
- Bitcoin’s order book depth halved to $35–40 million.
- Quarterly spot exchange volumes fell by 28%.
- Near $4.5 billion ETF outflows recorded in June.
- Open interest in Bitcoin and Ether dropped by 32% and 40%, respectively.
The demand weakening manifested distinctly towards the quarter’s conclusion. A stark daily net outflow of $696.3 million from US-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs on June 25 underscored this shift. Over June, these ETFs experienced almost $4.5 billion in outflows, culminating in a year-to-date net outflow of $5.5 billion.
The $696.3 million daily net outflow from US spot Bitcoin ETFs on June 25 was one of the clearest signals of weakening demand heading into the quarter’s end.
With declining Bitcoin purchases by Strategy and a contracting stablecoin supply, liquidity challenges persist. As cryptocurrency markets enter the latter half of 2026, traders face an increasingly complex landscape maintained by constrained balance sheets and susceptibility to volatile price changes.



