Most Liquidated (24h)
Whale Liquidations >$1M
Most Liquidated (24h)
Whale Liquidations >$1M
Liquidations/GAIB
No GAIB liquidations recorded in the last 24 hours.
No GAIB liquidations recorded in the last 24 hours.
Check the live liquidation feed for market-wide activity.
A GAIB liquidation happens when a leveraged GAIBfutures position is forcefully closed by the exchange because it can no longer meet its margin requirement. The position is closed at market, locking in the trader's loss and adding one-sided flow to the GAIB order book.
A long liquidation is a leveraged buyer being wiped out — a forced sell that typically clusters near local tops. A short liquidation is a leveraged seller being wiped out — a forced buy that clusters near local bottoms. When many traders sit on the same side of GAIB, a small move can trigger a liquidation cascade, where each forced close pushes price further and liquidates the next batch.
CryptoLovers tracks every GAIB liquidation in real time from the WebSocket feeds of Binance, OKX, Bybit, Bitget and Hyperliquid, then aggregates the last 24 hours into the totals above. Liquidations are a flow signal — they tell you what just happened, not what will happen next.
No GAIB liquidations have been recorded in the last 24 hours.
There is no GAIB liquidation data for the last 24 hours to compare longs against shorts.
A GAIB liquidation happens when a leveraged GAIB futures position is forcefully closed by the exchange because it can no longer meet its margin requirement. Long liquidations are forced sells (leveraged buyers wiped out); short liquidations are forced buys (leveraged sellers wiped out).
CryptoLovers streams GAIB liquidations live from the WebSocket feeds of Binance, OKX, Bybit, Bitget and Hyperliquid — the same raw data professional desks watch, with no proprietary estimate or delay.