Another liquidation alert just hit the market — and this time, it involves Zcash (
$ZEC ).
A notification came through showing:
“
$ZEC Short Liquidated — $67.5K at $416.75.”
Here’s what that actually means:
Someone had a short position open on ZEC — meaning they were betting the price would fall. But the opposite happened.
ZEC’s price pushed upward, and when it reached around $416.75, the trader’s margin couldn’t support the loss anymore, triggering an automatic liquidation.
Their position — worth $67,500 — was effectively wiped out.
Why This Matters
When a short position gets liquidated, it means:
The price moved against traders who were expecting a drop.The market is experiencing upward pressure.Momentum has shifted toward the buyers.
If we see multiple short liquidations in a row, something bigger can happen:
The Short Squeeze Effect
When shorts are forced to close, the exchange automatically buys back the asset to settle the position.
This buying action itself pushes the price even higher.
So liquidation → more buying → higher price → more shorts liquidated.
A chain reaction.
What to Watch Now
If ZEC continues to trigger short liquidations:
Momentum strengthens
Volatility increasesBreakouts become more likely
Smart traders don’t just watch price —
They watch who is being liquidated.
Because that’s where the real market pressure shows.
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