It wasn't USDe depegging, nor Binance pulling the plug, but a collective wrongdoing by market makers?
Written by: YQ
Translated by: AididiaoJP, Foresight News
In my previous three analyses of the cascading liquidations in the cryptocurrency market from October 10th to 11th, I examined oracle failures, infrastructure breakdowns, and potential vectors for coordinated attacks. This article shifts focus to perhaps the most critical yet underappreciated aspect: market makers. How did these entities, which are supposed to provide market stability, become the main catalyst for creating an unprecedented liquidity vacuum, turning a manageable adjustment into a $19 billions disaster?
Before examining the October crash, it’s crucial to understand what market makers are supposed to do. In traditional financial markets, market makers act as intermediaries, continuously quoting bid and ask prices for financial instruments. They profit from the spread between these prices while providing a key service: liquidity.
The theoretical roles of market makers include:
In cryptocurrency markets, market makers operate similarly but face unique challenges:
Under normal market conditions, this system works fairly well. Market makers earn modest spreads while providing necessary liquidity. However, October 10th-11th revealed what happens when arbitrage diverges from responsibility.
The precision of market makers’ withdrawal during the October crash reveals coordinated behavior rather than panic. Here’s a detailed timeline of how liquidity evaporated:
20:00 UTC: News of Trump’s formal announcement of 100% tariffs on Chinese imports hits social media. Bitcoin drops from $122,000. Market makers maintain positions but begin widening spreads—a standard defensive move.
Chart description: Binance, unnamed token _0, 1% two-way depth over the past 24 hours. Buy orders below the X-axis, sell orders above. Source: Coinwatch
20:40 UTC: Real-time tracking shows the start of catastrophic liquidity withdrawal. On a major token, market depth begins to plunge from $1.2 million.
21:00 UTC: The critical turning point. As the US trading session begins, macro conditions deteriorate sharply. Institutional participants withdraw liquidity, spreads widen, and order book depth thins. At this point, market makers shift from a defensive stance to full withdrawal.
21:20 UTC: Peak chaos. Nearly all tokens bottom out globally around this time amid a liquidation wave. The tracked token’s market depth drops to just $27,000—a 98% plunge. At the $108,000 level, liquidity providers stop maintaining prices, and some altcoins are pushed down by 80%.
21:35 UTC: As the most intense selling subsides, market makers cautiously return. Within 35 minutes, aggregated bid-ask depth on centralized exchanges recovers to over 90% of pre-event levels—but only after the greatest damage is done.
This pattern reveals three key points:
When market makers abandon price maintenance and liquidations overwhelm the order book, exchanges trigger their last line of defense: auto-deleveraging. Understanding this mechanism is crucial to grasping the full scope of the October disaster.
How Auto-Deleveraging Works on Centralized Exchanges
Auto-deleveraging represents the third and final tier in the liquidation hierarchy:
Auto-Deleveraging (ADL) Ranking System
Binance’s auto-deleveraging mechanism uses a complex ranking formula:
Auto-deleveraging rank score = Position P&L percentage × Effective leverage
Where:
Bybit’s approach is similar but includes additional safeguards. They display a 5-level ranking showing percentile:
The cruel irony: the most successful traders—those with the highest profits and leverage—are the first to be forcibly closed.
The Auto-Deleveraging Disaster of October
The scale of auto-deleveraging on October 10th-11th was unprecedented:
The correlation with market maker withdrawal timing is conclusive. As order books were emptied between 21:00-21:20 UTC, liquidations could not be completed normally, forcing insurance funds to deplete rapidly and triggering auto-deleveraging.
Consider what happened to a typical hedged portfolio during that critical 35-minute window:
21:00 UTC: The trader holds
21:10 UTC: Market makers withdraw. Dogecoin crashes, and the short position becomes highly profitable. But this combination of high leverage + profit triggers auto-deleveraging.
21:15 UTC: The Dogecoin short is forcibly closed via auto-deleveraging, and the portfolio loses its hedge.
21:20 UTC: With no hedge, the Bitcoin and Ethereum long positions are liquidated in the chain reaction.
Total loss: the entire portfolio.
This pattern repeated thousands of times. Sophisticated traders with carefully balanced positions saw their profitable hedges forcibly closed via auto-deleveraging, leaving them exposed and subsequently liquidated.
The synchronized withdrawal of liquidity reveals a fundamental structural problem. Market makers face incentives across multiple markets:
Asymmetric Risk/Reward
During extreme volatility, the potential losses from maintaining quotes far exceed spread profits. A market maker quoting $1 million in depth might earn $10,000 in spread during normal times, but face $500,000 in losses during a cascade.
Information Advantage
Market makers can see aggregated order flow and position distribution. When they detect a massive long bias (87% of positions are long), they know which way the cascade will go. If you know a tsunami of sell orders is coming, why provide bids?
No Defined Obligations
Unlike designated market makers in traditional exchanges, who have regulatory requirements, crypto market makers can withdraw at will, abandoning the market during crises with no penalty.
Arbitrage Opportunities
Data from the crash shows that market makers who withdrew quotes turned to arbitrage between exchanges. As price differences between venues reached over $300, arbitrage became far more profitable than market making.
The interaction between market maker withdrawal and auto-deleveraging created a devastating feedback loop:
This cycle continues until leveraged positions are essentially wiped out. Data shows total open interest in the market dropped by about 50% within hours.
The disaster of October 10th-11th was not primarily about excessive leverage or regulatory failure, but about misaligned incentives in market structure. When those responsible for maintaining orderly markets profit more from chaos than from stability, chaos becomes inevitable.
Timeline data shows that market makers did not panic—they executed a coordinated withdrawal at the optimal moment to minimize their own losses while maximizing subsequent opportunities. This rational behavior under the current incentive structure produced irrational outcomes for the entire market.
The liquidity crisis of October 2025 exposed a key weakness in crypto markets: voluntary liquidity provision fails precisely when involuntary provision is most needed. The $19 billions in liquidations was not just over-leveraged traders getting trapped; it was the predictable result of a system where market makers enjoy all the privileges of liquidity provision with none of the responsibility.
Pure laissez-faire market making does not work during periods of stress. Just as traditional markets evolved from the chaos of unregulated trading to include circuit breakers, position limits, and market maker obligations, crypto markets must implement similar safeguards.
Technical solutions exist:
What’s missing is the will to implement them. Unless crypto exchanges prioritize long-term stability over short-term fee maximization, we will continue to experience these "unprecedented" events with depressing regularity.
The 1.6 million accounts liquidated on October 10th-11th paid the price for this structural failure. The question is whether the industry will learn from their sacrifice, or simply wait for the next batch of traders to discover that, when crisis hits, the market makers they rely on will vanish like smoke, leaving only cascading liquidations and forcibly closed profitable positions behind.