Retail crypto derivatives traders spent the last half of 2025 doing something that rarely makes headlines: pausing before entering a trade to check how close a position would be to liquidation.
New analysis suggests traders increasingly check liquidation levels and margin requirements before periods of sharp market volatility—often hours or even days before large waves of forced liquidations appear across crypto markets.
The findings come from a behavioral study published earlier this year by Leverage.Trading, an independent publisher providing educational research and analysis on leverage trading and crypto derivatives markets. According to the report, U.S. retail crypto derivatives traders checked liquidation risk about twice as often per trader as the global average during periods of high market volatility in 2025.
The strongest regional split in the dataset appeared in the United States.
During high-volatility periods in late 2025, U.S. traders consistently checked liquidation levels and margin requirements more often than the global average when preparing leveraged trades. U.S. users represented only a small portion of the overall dataset—roughly 8–12% of total activity during the study period—with comparisons normalized for the number of users.
Outside the United States, activity tended to normalize faster once volatility cooled. Traders globally were more likely to return to building new positions sooner after major swings, while U.S. users appeared more focused on verifying exposure before entering trades.
Across several volatility spikes in 2025, checks on liquidation levels often increased before major liquidations appeared in public news feeds.
Because liquidation data only appears after positions are forced out of the market, it often reflects stress after the fact.
The dataset shows traders frequently checked liquidation levels early in the cycle, testing how close positions were to forced exits while volatility was still building. The analysis draws on roughly 880,000 anonymous risk checks performed in trading tools used to estimate liquidation distance and margin requirements across crypto derivatives exchanges.
Analytics firms such as CoinGlass and Glassnode track liquidation flows and derivatives positioning across crypto exchanges. But tools used by traders themselves can offer another perspective by revealing how retail participants evaluate risk before entering positions.
The dataset revealed a repeat pattern in how traders handled leverage during turbulent periods.
The first step was usually a wave of liquidation checks. As volatility began to build, traders frequently looked at how close positions were to being wiped out.
Next came checks on margin requirements. When price swings persisted, many users checked how much collateral might be required to keep positions open.
Only later did attention shift toward funding costs and the cost of maintaining trades for longer periods.
The pattern appeared across multiple volatility spikes during the second half of 2025.
The activity among retail traders took place across a wide range of crypto derivatives platforms, including futures exchanges and leverage trading platforms offering advanced margin tools.
Even as regulatory scrutiny increased in several jurisdictions, retail participation in crypto derivatives markets remained strong in 2025.
According to analysts at Leverage.Trading, traders increasingly appear to treat how close a position is to liquidation, along with margin requirements, as key factors when evaluating leveraged trades.
Instead of focusing only on entry price, many retail participants now look at how long a position can survive if volatility increases.
The post U.S. Retail Crypto Derivatives Traders Show Greater Focus on Liquidation Risk appeared first on FF News | Fintech Finance.



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