The liquidation record on the screen made me feel a bit suffocated — a $14.14 million position was completely wiped out within an hour. I stared at the Bitcoin hourly chart, looked at it repeatedly, and this feeling resembled a prelude to a larger, more violent shakeout.
Here's what happened. Shortly after the market opened yesterday afternoon, a top-tier whale was liquidated in a short-term rally where BTC surged 3%, using 40x leverage on a short position. The total liquidation exceeded $17.6 million. More painfully, after this guy was liquidated, he didn't pause at all; he immediately turned around and threw down a new short position worth $7.1 million with the same 40x leverage. This kind of playstyle reminds me of a similar scene on the night before last year's crash.
The truly worth pondering part is here. Data shows that this address has been the backbone of BTC shorts on the platform since December 19, and after holding for a week, it faced a massive liquidation today. 160 BTC were directly wiped out by the market.
But what alarmed me the most wasn't the liquidation itself, but his subsequent reaction — losing means immediately trying to make it back. It's like a gambler who, after losing big, goes all-in to get even. When extreme emotions appear, the market often brews a turning point. Such aggressive shorts might just be indicating something.
From a fundamental perspective, the whale's liquidation reflects the current fragility of the short positions. This signal deserves serious attention from traders.
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TokenomicsDetective
· 7h ago
Those who still dare to place new orders immediately after a red-eye liquidation are truly gambling mentality.
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ApyWhisperer
· 12-26 12:48
This guy is really blinded by gambling, clearing his position only to keep throwing in more? His mentality is completely blown up.
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WalletDoomsDay
· 12-26 12:45
160 coins gone in an instant, this move is really ruthless. But to keep pressing after losing, it's a bit like gambling... has a gambler's vibe.
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YieldHunter
· 12-26 12:44
ngl, this screams desperation more than it screams "market signal"... if you look at the data, 40x leverage right after getting liquidated is basically just degenerate behavior, not some mystical reversal tell. honestly been seeing this pattern way too often lately, and it never ends well for the retail crowd copying it lol
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RooftopVIP
· 12-26 12:43
This guy is really blinded by loss and still dares to continue throwing 7.1 million?
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DefiEngineerJack
· 12-26 12:39
nah this is textbook revenge trading energy... dude got liquidated and immediately yolo'd another 7-figure position? *sigh* that's when you know sentiment's about to flip hard
Reply0
UnruggableChad
· 12-26 12:23
Still daring to repeatedly hit with 40x leverage? This guy is really gambling with red eyes.
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SchrodingerGas
· 12-26 12:22
This guy is really a textbook example of herd mentality. Playing with 40x leverage like this continuously—what does it indicate? It shows that he's long been numb to losses and has fallen into the classic trap of the "gambler's fallacy," with the game-theoretic equilibrium completely broken down.
The liquidation record on the screen made me feel a bit suffocated — a $14.14 million position was completely wiped out within an hour. I stared at the Bitcoin hourly chart, looked at it repeatedly, and this feeling resembled a prelude to a larger, more violent shakeout.
Here's what happened. Shortly after the market opened yesterday afternoon, a top-tier whale was liquidated in a short-term rally where BTC surged 3%, using 40x leverage on a short position. The total liquidation exceeded $17.6 million. More painfully, after this guy was liquidated, he didn't pause at all; he immediately turned around and threw down a new short position worth $7.1 million with the same 40x leverage. This kind of playstyle reminds me of a similar scene on the night before last year's crash.
The truly worth pondering part is here. Data shows that this address has been the backbone of BTC shorts on the platform since December 19, and after holding for a week, it faced a massive liquidation today. 160 BTC were directly wiped out by the market.
But what alarmed me the most wasn't the liquidation itself, but his subsequent reaction — losing means immediately trying to make it back. It's like a gambler who, after losing big, goes all-in to get even. When extreme emotions appear, the market often brews a turning point. Such aggressive shorts might just be indicating something.
From a fundamental perspective, the whale's liquidation reflects the current fragility of the short positions. This signal deserves serious attention from traders.