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What Is the Risk If an Exchange Only Uses Its Own Last Traded Price for Liquidations?

The main risk is that a single large order or a coordinated action could temporarily move the exchange's Last Traded Price significantly, leading to unnecessary and unfair liquidations of leveraged positions. This is known as "wicking" or "flash crash" liquidation risk.

It allows manipulators to profit at the expense of liquidated traders.

How Does Price Manipulation Risk Increase without a Mark Price System?
What Is the Danger of Using the ‘Last Traded Price’ for Liquidation?
Why Do Exchanges Use a Mark Price Instead of the Last Traded Price for Liquidations?
What Is the Risk of “Exchange Isolation” for a Single-Exchange Spot Price?