Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
519 Event Deep Review: How That Black Swan in the Crypto Market Created a Nightmare for Millions
It’s been five years since May 19, 2021, but for the old-timers who experienced that 519 incident, the memory remains fresh. That crazy day saw the crypto market plunge from heaven to hell in an instant, with countless investors going from dreams of wealth to bankruptcy nightmares. The 519 event was not just a market correction; it was one of the most dramatic “earthquakes” in cryptocurrency history—within just 72 hours, millions of assets shrank, and countless contracts were liquidated instantly.
Looking back now, Wall Street’s control over the market has become increasingly strict, making scenes of wild growth and frantic crashes much less common. But how exactly did the 519 incident happen? How did a tweet, a regulatory order, and a market bubble trigger a multi-trillion-dollar crash in just 48 hours? This article will take you back to that dramatic moment.
How a Word from Musk Turned the Market Upside Down
In early 2021, the crypto market was in a frenzy. Bitcoin soared from $30,000 at the start of the year to $64,000 by mid-April, an increase of over 100%. Elon Musk played the role of “guru”—Tesla announced a $1.5 billion investment in Bitcoin, and Musk kept hyping Dogecoin on Twitter. Every tweet from him could shake the market; he seemed to become the “king of crypto hype.”
But the situation suddenly reversed in mid-May. On May 12, Musk posted a tweet that changed the market’s direction—Tesla announced it would stop accepting Bitcoin payments, citing environmental concerns over mining. The news hit like a thunderclap—Bitcoin plummeted from $57,000 to $46,000 in a flash, a drop of over 19%.
Even more damaging were the subsequent comments. On May 16, Musk hinted that Tesla might sell its Bitcoin holdings, sparking a new wave of panic. On May 17, Musk tried to clarify that Tesla hadn’t sold, but market confidence had already shattered. A series of tweets from one person acted like pressing the self-destruct button on the market—investors started frantic selling, and each sale accelerated the decline.
The Double Blow of Regulation and Bubble
It wasn’t just Musk’s words causing chaos; on May 18, signals from Chinese regulators also emerged. The China Internet Finance Association, Banking Association, and Payment & Clearing Association jointly issued notices banning members from participating in virtual currency trading. On the same day, Inner Mongolia’s Development and Reform Commission set up a reporting platform for crypto mining—marking China’s crackdown on the industry.
While these weren’t entirely new policies, the market interpreted them as the prelude to a regulatory storm, triggering panic selling. At this moment, the market was hit from two sides—Musk’s statements from abroad and regulatory pressure at home.
Meanwhile, another deep root of the 519 event was surfacing—the long-standing market bubble. During the bullish run of the first four months of 2021, not only mainstream coins like Bitcoin and Ethereum surged, but altcoins went wild. Dogecoin, Shiba Inu, SafeMoon, and others skyrocketed from fractions of a cent to several cents or even dollars, with gains of thousands of times. These surges lacked fundamental support, driven purely by social media hype and speculation. When Musk turned his back and regulators stepped in, this illusionary bubble burst instantly.
The 72-Hour Nightmare of the 519 Event
In the early hours of May 19, the most intense trigger phase of the 519 event unfolded.
Bitcoin, which was still around $43,000 on the evening of May 18, dropped to $30,000 by the morning of May 19—a 30% decline in a single day. Ethereum fared even worse, falling from $3,300 to $1,900, a 42% drop. Other coins showed even more shocking declines, with many altcoins losing over 50%.
This was not just a price drop; it was a complete market meltdown. Exchanges and wallet services simultaneously went offline—millions of users couldn’t log in, close positions, or escape. Some watched helplessly as their assets evaporated during circuit breakers, unable to do anything. The derivatives market became a “meat grinder”—panic indices soared to their highest levels since 2021, while greed indices plunged to their lowest since March 2020.
Within these 72 hours, thousands of people went from wealth to ruin. Some had been planning their lives the day before, only to lose everything the next. That’s the cruel truth of the 519 event—the madness and coldness of the market were amplified to the extreme at this moment.
Recovery and Reflection: How the 519 Event Changed the Market
By the afternoon of May 19, the market began to rebound. Bitcoin recovered from its low of $30,000 to $40,000 by May 20, a 33% increase. Ethereum also rebounded strongly, from $1,900 to $2,800, up 47%. Some bottom-fishers and optimistic institutions started buying, providing support for the market.
But the scars left by the 519 event had not yet healed. In subsequent adjustments, the market entered a new cognitive phase—people began to reflect on what truly has value and what is just a bubble. Regulatory interventions, the entry of large institutions, and increased risk awareness subtly reshaped the market ecosystem.
Looking back five years later, the greatest significance of the 519 event is that it taught market participants what a “black swan” and a “liquidity trap” really mean. Today’s crypto market still has waves, but with Wall Street capital flowing in, the market is gradually becoming more institutionalized and regulated. The era of wild growth driven purely by emotion and hype is fading. The 519 incident is not only a bloody footnote in the development of the crypto market but also a crucial turning point in its maturation.