By CoinEpigraph Editorial Desk | November 21 2025
Weeks after the October 10th liquidation cascade, the crypto market continues to move with a limp. Prices fluctuate, but liquidity feels hollow. Order books look shallower, spreads are wider, and moments of volatility appear exaggerated. The reason isn’t psychological — it’s structural: the market’s automated liquidation engines delivered a shock that sidelined market makers, and the ecosystem is still digesting it.
The Day Liquidity Cracked
On October 10th, a sharp market-wide draw-down triggered one of the largest automated liquidation events of the year, and the effects have not fully cleared. Liquidations in crypto are not like those in traditional finance. They cascade through automated mechanisms, including systems such as ADLK, an automated liquidation protocol used by several platforms for risk control.
In traditional markets, margin calls unfold through human oversight, negotiation, and structured settlement.
In crypto, liquidation is a buttonless process. Once thresholds are breached:
- positions are closed automatically
- collateral is sold into open markets
- cascading sell-pressure emerges
- market makers absorb the impact — or step aside
- slippage expands
- spreads widen
- liquidity evaporates in pockets
The October event wasn’t just a “selloff.”
It was an architectural stress test.
Why Market Makers Are the Central Nervous System
Crypto markets depend on market makers more than most participants realize. In traditional finance, central banks, primary dealers, and institutional liquidity providers ensure continuous price discovery and order-book depth. Crypto has no central bank, but it has something functionally similar:
market makers are the shadow liquidity engine of the ecosystem.
They:
- tighten spreads
- supply both sides of order books
- absorb shocks
- reduce volatility
- stabilize slippage
- create synthetic depth
- enable large transactions without severe price impact
Without them, the market becomes brittle.
When the October 10th liquidation cascade struck, market makers were hit disproportionately:
- inventories were force-liquidated
- hedges broke correlation
- automated liquidation systems tripped risk engines
- collateral buffers thinned
- volatility models blew out
The result?
Many market makers temporarily pulled liquidity to re-balance risk.
Even weeks later, the liquidity desert left behind has not fully refilled.
Automated Liquidation Systems and ADLK: A Double-Edged Sword
One of the least discussed but most important components of crypto’s microstructure is the suite of automated liquidation frameworks used by exchanges and lending protocols — one example being ADLK, a system designed to execute liquidation events algorithmically without manual intervention.
These systems exist because crypto trades 24/7.
There is no close bell, no overnight pause, and no emergency circuit-breaker committee that can gather in real time.
But automation carries consequences:
1. Liquidations happen instantly
There is no negotiation, no partial unwind, no delayed settlement.
This leads to speed-induced cascades.
2. Liquidations compound each other
As collateral is sold, prices fall, triggering more liquidations, reinforcing the cycle.
3. Market makers become involuntary counter-parties
They must either absorb the flow or retreat.
During October, many retreated.
4. Liquidity recovery becomes slow
Market makers do not rush back into a market that just punished their models.
They re-price risk premiums, widen spreads, and rebuild hedges.
This is why the market still feels thin even after volatility has calmed.
Why Crypto Feels “Slow” Now
Even though prices have not collapsed, the underlying liquidity conditions remain fragile. Professional desks watch metrics such as:
- order-book depth at the mid-price
- slippage per $1M traded
- perpetual funding volatility
- liquidation depth distribution
- stablecoin bid density
All of these indicators show signs of stress following October’s cascade.
The market is not broken — it is rehabilitating.
Market makers are recalibrating volatility models.
Quant desks are adjusting liquidation triggers.
Algorithmic strategies are widening their operating bands.
On-chain leverage is quietly being reduced.
This is the slow, unglamorous part of market normalization that most retail traders never see.
What Signals to Watch Next
To understand when liquidity is “back,” watch for:
1. Narrowing spreads on top pairs
When spreads tighten materially, MMs are leaning back in.
2. Increase in order-book thickness
Particularly the first 20–50 bps on each side.
3. Lower liquidation volume
A decrease means leverage is healthier.
4. Return of high-frequency flow
When quant strategies fire up again, liquidity recovers rapidly.
5. Lower implied volatility premiums
A sign that volatility engines have reset.
Until these signals align, the market will continue to feel like it’s walking on repaired legs.
Conclusion
The post-October slowdown is not a sentiment issue — it is the aftereffect of a structural shock to crypto’s liquidity engine. Automated liquidation systems did their job, but in doing so, they damaged the very mechanism that keeps markets smooth: market makers.
What we are witnessing now is not weakness.
It is structural recovery.
The next phase of the cycle begins once liquidity providers fully return — and that, as always, will happen quietly.
At CoinEpigraph, we are committed to delivering digital-asset journalism with clarity, accuracy, and uncompromising integrity. Our editorial team works daily to provide readers with reliable, insight-driven coverage across an ever-shifting crypto and macro-financial landscape. As we continue to broaden our reporting and introduce new sections and in-depth op-eds, our mission remains unchanged: to be your trusted, authoritative source for the world of crypto and emerging finance.
— Ian Mayzberg, Editor-in-Chief
The team at CoinEpigraph.com is committed to independent analysis and a clear view of the evolving digital asset order.
To help sustain our work and editorial independence, we would appreciate your support of any amount of the tokens listed below. Support independent journalism:
BTC: 3NM7AAdxxaJ7jUhZ2nyfgcheWkrquvCzRm
SOL: HxeMhsyDvdv9dqEoBPpFtR46iVfbjrAicBDDjtEvJp7n
ETH: 0x3ab8bdce82439a73ca808a160ef94623275b5c0a
XRP: rLHzPsX6oXkzU2qL12kHCH8G8cnZv1rBJh TAG – 1068637374
SUI – 0xb21b61330caaa90dedc68b866c48abbf5c61b84644c45beea6a424b54f162d0c
and through our Support Page.
🔍 Disclaimer: CoinEpigraph is for entertainment and information, not investment advice. Markets are volatile — always conduct your own research.
COINEPIGRAPH™ does not offer investment advice. Always conduct thorough research before making any market decisions regarding cryptocurrency or other asset classes. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future outcomes. All rights reserved | 版权所有 ™ © 2024-2029.

