On June 2, Kalshi pushed past the $100 million mark for the first time when it comes to spot volume within crypto-based event contracts. Data from Artemis shows that spot volume in this category reached $107.6 million yesterday surpassing the previous high set on March 16. The timing of this record is what makes it interesting as it landed on a day wherein the crypto markets experienced its largest liquidation event since February. A Record on the Largest Liquidation Day of 2026 June 2 saw Bitcoin slide below $67k for the first time since April 2. The total crypto market cap fell by over 5%, shedding roughly $137 billion. The dip resulted in around $1.76 billion in crypto liquidations over 24 hours, making yesterday the heaviest de-leveraging day since February 5, according to CoinGlass data. The majority of liquidations came from the long side with around $1.59 billion worth of positions wiped. The selloff didn’t come out of nowhere. Institutional demand has waned over the past two weeks adding to the bleak sentiment. Bitcoin spot ETFs are on a 12 day outflow streak, making it the longest ever losing streak since its inception in January 2024. Ethereum Spot ETFs haven’t fared any better notching 16 consecutive days of outflows. Uncertainty was compounded by the news of Saylor’s Strategy BTC sale, rattling holders who counted on the firm never touching its stack. Mt. Gox Moved Coins and the Drop Picked Up Speed Mt. Gox just moved 10,306 BTC ($731M).We’ve seen similar transfers before, tied to creditor repayments and distribution preparation.Importantly, they did not lead to immediate selling pressure. pic.twitter.com/Zz58rDdbsp— CryptoQuant.com (@cryptoquant_com) June 2, 2026On June 2, the Mt. Gox estate moved 10,306 BTC worth about $731 million, according to CryptoQuant. Blockchain data placed the transfer in the early hours, with most of it routed to a fresh address that had no prior history. CryptoQuant analysts were quick to note the coins didn’t hit an exchange and that past transfers like this haven’t led to immediate selling. Markets didn’t wait around for that nuance. Bitcoin dropped fast as the headline crossed, and leveraged positions got run over in the move. That’s the backdrop Kalshi set its crypto record against. Same session, two very different stories.Why the Carnage Is Becoming Kalshi’s EdgeHere’s the part worth sitting with. The record didn’t happen despite the liquidations. It happened because of them. When leverage breaks, traders who just got flushed need somewhere to express a view without getting wrecked again. Binary price contracts do that. You buy a “BTC above X” or “below X” contract, your downside is capped at what you paid, and there’s no liquidation price to defend. So flow rotated. Some of it as hedges, some as straight directional bets on where Bitcoin lands next. This fits a pattern that’s been building for months. Kalshi’s crypto-category volume went vertical from February, and the week ending May 17 already set a $454.2 million all-time high on Artemis numbers, flipping Polymarket’s early-year lead. A single day above $100 million is the daily version of that same trend.The bigger read is about what Kalshi is turning into. Not a sportsbook with a crypto tab bolted on the side. A volatility venue. The place flow goes when leverage breaks rather than a fair-weather add-on. If that holds, the crypto category should compound on exactly the chaos that hurts everyone else in the market.The thing to watch now is whether these levels stick. Records set during a liquidation event are easy. Holding them once the tape goes quiet is the real test, and that’s the number that’ll tell you whether June 2 was a one-off or a floor.If you're reading this, you’re already ahead. Stay there with our newsletter.