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I noticed an interesting movement over the weekend — a wave of liquidations on decentralized platforms related to oil contracts. Nearly $40 million was liquidated in a couple of days, with about $37 million of that being shorts. All this happened because oil prices suddenly surged 30% due to escalating tensions in the Middle East. CL-USDC reached $114.77, and USOIL hit $135.
The most fascinating part is the size of the movement. It turns out that when weekends start with missile launches and traditional markets are closed, crypto platforms become one of the few places where you can get leverage on commodity assets. Open interest in oil contracts reached $195 million with a trading volume of $570 million over 24 hours — a feat that was impossible for tokenized commodities a year ago.
In terms of scale, this event ranks third on the platform after Bitcoin and Ethereum in liquidation volume. By the way, the crypto market itself also took a hit — nearly $365 million was liquidated across all assets in 24 hours. Bitcoin briefly broke through $76K but then retreated, and it has been battling that level for two months now. On major platforms, funding rates for Bitcoin remain negative for 46 consecutive days — traders are clearly in a defensive stance despite the rising open interest.
It’s interesting to observe how traders are increasingly using crypto markets to express macroeconomic views. What used to be just speculation is now becoming a tool for analyzing positions based on global events. Those who bet on oil prices falling over the weekend paid the price for it. Iraqi production dropped 60%, Kuwait and the UAE reduced output — these are real fundamental factors, but the market reacted instantly and sharply.