Episode 4 of the Whiteboard series is now live on YouTube.
This video covers everything you need to know about ranges.
Likes and RTs are appreciated!
https://t.co/PSPrNwMfWF
@Crypto_Crib_ I am from Europe, and there is truth to this we are complaining about the prices but arent helping. At the same time tho we didnt start this war, we werent even informed of it going to happen.
@Arden_2210 Its constantly current number times previois number + previous number sooo example
4 x 3 = 12 + 3 = 15
Soo for the 7 it becomes 7 × 6 = 42 + 6 = 48 final answer
Last Friday delivered one of the worst altcoin wipeouts in crypto history, and the post-mortem of it has been a whisper.
When LUNA blew up, it owned the news. When FTX collapsed, it ruled the cycle. When we had our COVID crash, Crypto Twitter couldn’t stop talking about how we almost went to zero and what saved us.
But this time, a week later, there’s near silence. Instead, we’re told it was just a tweet. That’s not serious analysis. Yes, late Friday, Trump dropped a trade-war headline after U.S. markets closed: 100% tariffs on China and new export controls. That was the spark.
But a single tweet doesn’t send alts down 70% in minutes or vaporize entire portfolios within an hour.
The violence came from structure, from a breakdown deep in crypto’s plumbing.
During the flush, Ethena’s synthetic dollar, USDe (ticker USDe), printed as low as $0.65 on Binance while holding near $1 on other venues. This wasn’t a global depeg. It appears to have been a Binance-local pricing failure, an oracle and order-book divergence that instantly slashed collateral values for users on Binance’s unified margin system.
When your collateral is repriced that far down on a single venue, everything built on it collapses.
On Binance’s unified / cross-margin system, traders can post multiple assets, including USDe and wrapped tokens, as collateral across all their open positions.
When Binance’s feed suddenly marks USDe at $0.65 instead of $1.00, the user’s collateral value shrinks, maintenance ratios blow up, and the liquidation engine begins selling their other assets, often high-beta alts, into an already collapsing market.
Those forced sells push prices lower, triggering more liquidations across the exchange and, through arbitrage, across the entire crypto market.
Example:
Imagine a trader with $200,000 total equity.
$50,000 in USDe collateral
$150,000 in long altcoin positions
Binance marks USDe at $0.65, so that $50,000 becomes $32,500; In this case, $17,500 in margin cushion vanishes instantly.
The system detects the shortfall and auto-liquidates part of the alt positions to rebalance. Those sells slam into thin order books, driving alt prices down another 20–30% almost instantly.
Now the trader’s remaining alts, which weren’t yet liquidated, are worth even less, cutting collateral ratios further and triggering the next round of liquidations.
Each liquidation dump pushes prices down for everyone else using the same assets as collateral, igniting a chain reaction. By the time the loop finishes, hundreds of millions in positions are forcibly sold, and the cascade becomes self-fueling, a liquidation spiral that consumes everything in its path.
What started as a local pricing glitch becomes a global liquidity collapse.
Arthur Hayes @CryptoHayes summed it up perfectly: “USDe didn’t depeg. Binance did.”
The Ethena protocol remained solvent and over-collateralized. The problem was the venue’s internal feeds and book structure under stress.
When an exchange values collateral based on its own shallow order book instead of a broad market reference, small cracks become sinkholes.
This doesn’t absolve Ethena, any asset printing 35% below peg, even locally, shows fragility. But this wasn’t another LUNA.
It was a mechanical failure, a venue-specific collateral mispricing colliding with excessive leverage and opaque cross-margin rules. The result was one of the largest liquidation waves in crypto history, nearly $19 billion in forced unwinds within 24 hours.
That doesn’t happen from headlines. It occurs when margin engines and oracles fail under stress.
Binance has since promised to compensate affected users and rework how wrapped and synthetic assets are priced. That alone is an admission something broke. And yet, this event has been largely swept under the rug thus far.
We’ve seen bigger macro shocks before: Liberation Day, COVID, and even FTX contagion, yet none triggered alts to implode 70–99% in an hour.
This wasn’t fear. It was faulty design.
One venue’s pricing feed dislocated, collateral collapsed, and liquidation engines spread that contagion everywhere. The industry’s core issue is now undeniable: Too many opaque, venue-specific risk systems govern leverage, collateral, and liquidation.
When one breaks, the entire system pays for it. Design flaws, not tweets, keep blowing up the market.
If this reconstruction is wrong, then @binance and @cz_binance should publish the data:
Which feeds broke and when?
Which collateral assets were hair-cut, and how many users were liquidated? How is the compensation being calculated?
And @ethena should release a venue-by-venue chart showing USDe pricing, redemptions, and hedging during the event, to prove solvency and pinpoint where the break occurred.
Roughly $19 billion didn’t vanish into thin air. People were liquidated, portfolios erased, and careers ended because the pipes broke. If this wasn’t the cause, prove it. If it was, fix it.
Because headlines aren’t destroying crypto, it’s being destroyed by its own infrastructure.
This can’t be another story buried under “macro fear.” The silence is the loudest signal of all.
Systems failed. Users paid the price. And the industry owes them an explanation.
If we don’t fix the plumbing now, the following “tweet” could light the same fuse, and eventually, there might not be much left to save.
Because if a tweet can burn $19 billion, it’s not the tweet that’s the problem; it’s the system.