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Bitcoin’s 67-Day Funding Streak Ended — But Not All Traders Liquidated at the Same Price

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Bitcoin’s 67-Day Funding Streak Ended — But Not All Traders Liquidated at the Same Price

Bitcoin’s long stretch of negative funding rates finally came to an end this week, but the market reversal exposed something many leveraged traders still overlook: Two traders can place the exact same Bitcoin trade on different exchanges and still get liquidated at different prices.

According to a recent report by The Block citing research from K33 Research, Bitcoin’s 30-day average funding rate remained negative for 67 consecutive days, marking the longest such streak of the decade. The streak reflected overwhelming bearish positioning across derivatives markets as traders continued piling into short bets during Bitcoin’s consolidation phase.

When sentiment finally shifted, the move happened aggressively. Bitcoin surged back above the $80,000 level. It triggered a major wave of liquidations across crypto derivatives markets. Data from CoinGlass showed that roughly $415.57 million in positions were liquidated within 24 hours, with short traders accounting for 76.6% of the damage.

While most market coverage focused on the sheer scale of the liquidations and the historic funding streak, another detail quietly emerged underneath the volatility: traders holding identical positions on separate exchanges were not liquidated at the same levels. The reason comes down to a variable many retail traders rarely pay attention to before opening a leveraged position: the maintenance margin rate.

Two Identical Trades, Two Different Liquidation Prices

On major crypto derivatives platforms, Bitcoin perpetual contracts do not all operate under the same maintenance margin requirements. Depending on the exchange, maintenance margin rates for $BTC perpetuals typically range between 0.4% and 0.5%. That difference may appear insignificant at first glance, but under leverage, it can materially alter where a position gets closed automatically.

For instance, two traders could open the same 10x Bitcoin long at a $65,000 entry, but still end up with different liquidation prices depending on the exchange. On a platform with a 0.4% maintenance margin rate, the position might be liquidated at around $58,760. On another exchange using a 0.5% rate, it could be closer to $58,825.

That is a difference of about $65 per Bitcoin, even though the trade setup is identical. Once the position size gets bigger, that gap can add up fast. A 10 $BTC position could see a liquidation threshold difference of nearly $650 purely because the trade was opened on a different exchange.

The liquidation process becomes even more complicated once mark price calculations are factored in. In crypto futures markets, liquidations are triggered by the mark price rather than the last traded market price. Each derivatives exchange calculates mark price differently, using its own index methodology and weighting system based on external spot exchange data.

As a result, a rapid market move can trigger liquidations on one platform while leaving identical positions untouched on another. That distinction became particularly important during Bitcoin’s sharp rebound following the prolonged negative funding environment. Because short exposure had accumulated heavily across nearly every major derivatives venue during the 67-day streak, the sudden upside move activated liquidation engines across the market.

Leverage.Trading’s research on how crypto futures liquidations work breaks down how these platform variables combine to determine the exact point where a trade is closed. Anton Palovaara, founder at Leverage.Trading, said many traders only discover these exchange-specific differences after their positions are already gone.

“Two traders, identical setups, different exchanges. One got liquidated, one didn’t. That’s not bad luck. Maintenance margin rates between major platforms differ by 0.1 percentage points or more on $BTC perpetuals. That shifts your liquidation price by tens of dollars per $BTC. Most traders running leverage don’t know which rate their exchange uses, or how that exchange calculates mark price. Both numbers determine where you actually get out,” Palovaara explained.

The recent liquidation wave highlighted how exchange mechanics themselves can become part of a trader’s risk profile, not just market direction or leverage size. Many onboarding processes on crypto derivatives platforms emphasize leverage limits and trading features, but maintenance margin structures and mark price methodologies are often buried deep inside technical documentation. The hidden variables may increasingly separate traders who survive volatile swings from those who are automatically forced out during them.

Bitcoin’s 67-Day Funding Streak Ended — But Not All Traders Liquidated at the Same Price