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Ethereum is trading at roughly $2,248, less than $100 below a reported $2,346 price level that, according to unconfirmed reports, could trigger up to $893 million in cumulative short liquidations across mainstream centralized exchanges. The claim has circulated in crypto media but has not been independently verified through publicly accessible data.
The $2,346 threshold and its associated $893 million short liquidation figure originated from a Chinese-language report attributed to ChainCatcher, citing CoinGlass liquidation map data. No English-language authoritative source has published the exact same threshold-intensity pair.
At press time, ETH was trading at $2,248.30, approximately $97.70 below the cited breakout level. The token had gained about 0.4% over the prior 24 hours.
A move from $2,248 to $2,346 would represent a gain of roughly 4.4%. In a market where the Fear and Greed Index sits at 15 (Extreme Fear), sudden momentum shifts in either direction are not unusual, particularly when leveraged positions cluster around nearby price levels.
When a trader opens a leveraged short position on a centralized exchange, they are betting that the price will fall. If the price instead rises past their liquidation threshold, the exchange automatically closes the position by buying back the asset at market price.
When many short positions share similar liquidation thresholds, a price move through that zone can trigger a cascade. Each forced buy adds upward pressure, pushing the price further and liquidating the next layer of shorts. This feedback loop is commonly called a short squeeze.
Platforms like CoinGlass aggregate open-interest data from major exchanges and display it as a liquidation map, a visual chart showing the estimated dollar value of positions that would be forcibly closed at each price level. These maps help traders identify zones of concentrated risk, though the underlying data shifts in real time as positions open and close.
A similar dynamic played out in early March 2025, when CoinDesk reported that a single ETH position worth $126 million came within 4% of liquidation during a sharp price decline. That episode illustrated how concentrated leveraged exposure in crypto markets can create outsized volatility around specific price levels.
The research underpinning this article attempted to verify the headline claim through multiple channels. The exact $2,346 and $893 million pair could not be confirmed through any publicly accessible English-language source or API endpoint.
CoinGlass does host an ETH derivatives page with liquidation-map analytics, but its public API returned an "API key missing" error when queried for historical liquidation data. Without authenticated access, the underlying liquidation-intensity table values could not be independently retrieved.
A KuCoin flash news item used similar framing but cited different numbers entirely: a $2,100 trigger tied to approximately $896 million in short liquidations. The discrepancy between these figures, and the absence of a single confirmable primary source, means readers should treat the specific $2,346/$893 million pair as unconfirmed.
This type of verification gap is common with liquidation-map claims because the data is dynamic. Positions open and close constantly, so any snapshot figure can shift within minutes. Readers tracking institutional positioning and market variables should check live CoinGlass data directly rather than relying on any single reported threshold.
Ethereum's market cap stood at approximately $271.3 billion at the time of the research snapshot, with 24-hour trading volume near $9.85 billion.
That volume level suggests active two-way trading, which matters for liquidation scenarios. Higher volume generally means the market can absorb forced liquidation orders with less slippage, while thin order books amplify the squeeze effect.
The broader crypto market sentiment index from Alternative.me registered 15, classified as Extreme Fear. Periods of extreme fear often coincide with elevated short interest, as bearish traders pile into leveraged positions expecting further declines. Paradoxically, this clustering of shorts is exactly what creates the conditions for a squeeze if the price reverses.
ETH's modest 0.4% gain over 24 hours, set against a cautious broader market backdrop, suggests the token is consolidating rather than trending decisively in either direction. That sideways action keeps both the $2,346 upside trigger and downside liquidation levels in play.
No. A liquidation map shows a snapshot of current open positions, not a guaranteed outcome. Traders can close or adjust positions before that level is reached. The $893 million figure, if accurate at the time it was reported, represents a theoretical maximum under static conditions that rarely persist.
Liquidation intensity refers to the estimated cumulative dollar value of leveraged positions that would be forcibly closed if the price reaches a given level. CoinGlass aggregates data from multiple exchanges to produce these estimates. The figures update continuously as traders modify their positions.
Key indicators include open interest changes on major futures exchanges, funding rates (which signal whether longs or shorts are paying a premium), and real-time liquidation data on CoinGlass. A sharp spike in volume alongside a move toward $2,346 would be more significant than a low-volume drift toward that level.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
The post ETH Nears $2,346 as $893M Short Liquidation Risk Builds was initially published on Coincu.