ETH Contract Positions Rise 11.59% Across Network in 24 Hours
ETH network-wide contract positions reportedly increased by 11.59% in 24 hours, according to an unconfirmed report, but the directly verifiable evidence in this brief points more narrowly to elevated futures exposure and large liquidations on Ethereum’s derivatives market.
What the brief can verify
The headline percentage itself could not be reproduced from fetchable CoinGlass endpoints in this environment. An English-language WEEX report that cited CoinGlass described a 10.25% increase in ETH contract positions, which means the published percentages were already diverging before this draft was written.
The strongest confirmed data point is ETH futures open interest. The CoinGlass ETH futures page showed roughly $33.89 billion in outstanding ETH contracts, giving a direct snapshot of how much capital was committed across the derivatives complex.
The same CoinGlass page data also showed about $190.67 million in 24-hour ETH liquidations and 17,559 liquidated traders. That combination matters because it shows the market was not only carrying large open positions, but also forcing a meaningful number of them out during the same window.
Taken together, the open-interest and liquidation readings show a market that was both expanding and punishing wrong-way leverage at the same time. That is a stronger conclusion than calling the move bullish or bearish, because the brief does not verify whether the new exposure skewed long or short.
The research brief also logged ETH at $2,339 after a 4.99% daily gain, second place by market cap, an Extreme Fear sentiment reading of 21, and Ethereum TVL at $118.23 billion. Those figures widen the backdrop, but they still do not settle the reported contract-position jump.
What remains unresolved
The brief further notes that CoinGlass routes for coin history, tickers, and open-interest data returned success statuses without usable payloads, so the article cannot independently prove the headline percentage from a primary endpoint. When the percentage claim is disputed, the visible open-interest reading and liquidation totals are the firmer basis for publication.
That narrower reading matters because the brief does not contain verified funding-rate data, exchange-by-exchange breakdowns, or a confirmed catalyst for why positions expanded. Coincu has separately covered Hong Kong’s stablecoin licensing shift, the Bitcoin premium income ETF filing linked to BlackRock, and Kevin Warsh’s Polymarket and SpaceX holdings, but those are adjacent market narratives rather than evidence for this ETH derivatives update.
Based on the evidence that can be tied directly to the brief, the safest conclusion is that Ethereum derivatives activity was heavy and liquidation pressure was real, while the exact network-wide contract-position increase remained unconfirmed. That keeps the story grounded in what the CoinGlass ETH futures dashboard actually showed and what the secondary English report could only partly corroborate.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.








