Looking back at BTC's rise from 15,000 to 126,000, each V-shaped reversal was accompanied by a wave of long leverage liquidation. But this round is a bit strange—leverage doesn't seem to have been cleaned up much, yet it directly broke through the all-time high. That logic doesn't add up.
I took a position at 88,000, but then another V reversal happened, and the unrealized losses are quite uncomfortable. A careful look at the chart reveals the problem: previously, after each low point that wiped out longs (marked by the green line), there was a dip below that level followed by a V reversal (red line). But this time, the low points have been steadily rising, completely breaking the usual liquidation logic.
This phenomenon is indeed a bit strange. In the short term, either add to positions on dips or continue to wait and see. The rising lows might mean something, but the market's signals are still not clear enough.
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quietly_staking
· 22h ago
I've never seen the tactic of raising the lows before; it feels a bit like mysticism. Could the main force be holding back a big move?
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MEVSupportGroup
· 01-14 17:51
The lows are not broken but instead raised... This is indeed a bit fierce, feels like the big players are holding back a major move?
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MintMaster
· 01-14 17:46
Haha, the logic of constantly raising the low points is indeed strange. It feels like a shakeout but not quite, kind of breaking the defense.
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HashRateHermit
· 01-14 17:38
Hmm... continuously raising the low points does feel a bit sneaky. It seems like the leverage cleanup wasn't as thorough this time.
Looking back at BTC's rise from 15,000 to 126,000, each V-shaped reversal was accompanied by a wave of long leverage liquidation. But this round is a bit strange—leverage doesn't seem to have been cleaned up much, yet it directly broke through the all-time high. That logic doesn't add up.
I took a position at 88,000, but then another V reversal happened, and the unrealized losses are quite uncomfortable. A careful look at the chart reveals the problem: previously, after each low point that wiped out longs (marked by the green line), there was a dip below that level followed by a V reversal (red line). But this time, the low points have been steadily rising, completely breaking the usual liquidation logic.
This phenomenon is indeed a bit strange. In the short term, either add to positions on dips or continue to wait and see. The rising lows might mean something, but the market's signals are still not clear enough.