#数字资产行情上升 9.1K vs 9.3K: Liquidity Minefield Has Emerged, Main Force Hunting Schedule Is Clear
Yesterday, I looked at the liquidation heatmap, and those two peaks made me laugh out loud—another round of the market writing its true intentions on the chart.
The data is straightforward: Breaking below 9.1K → 508 million long contracts queued for explosion Stabilizing above 9.3K → 256 million short contracts all buried
This isn’t prediction; it’s the underlying logic carved into the chain. The key point is: the liquidation distribution chart isn’t mysticism but a high-definition scan of the current position structure—those long positions piled up at 9.1K? The endgame of retail FOMO. And the shorts above 9.3K? The last stubborn resistance of old bears against the trend.
My judgment is based on two lines:
**Short-term bait for longs at 9.1K**—If the main force wants to shake the market, this level will inevitably be "poked" through, aiming to create extreme moves to trigger stop-losses and generate a liquidity vacuum. I will closely watch whether large wallets are placing buy orders at the bottom.
**Breaking through 9.3K triggers short squeeze**—Once large volume is released and the price stabilizes at this level, the need to close 256 million shorts will act like rocket fuel, pushing the price toward 9.6K or even 9.8K.
Why am I so confident? Three dimensions:
1️⃣ **Funding Rate Signal**—Over the past day, perpetual contract funding rates have soared to 0.05%, indicating that long positions are overheating. A healthy bull market needs this kind of temperature regulation; liquidation waves are the normal rhythm.
2️⃣ **Microstructure Density**—In the narrow range of 9.1K to 9.3K, there hasn’t been such dense order pile-up in three months. The longer the price stays in this zone, the more explosive the energy when it finally breaks through.
3️⃣ **Cycle Resonance**—From 4-hour to daily charts, multiple timeframes are forming a high consensus in this range. Once a one-sided breakout occurs, it’s hard to have a retracement.
**Trading Levels**:
First shot: If it falls below 9.1K, I’ll go long at 8.95-9K, with a stop-loss at 8.88K (clear risk boundary).
Second shot: Confirm the breakout above 9.33K with volume; don’t wait for a pullback—go in directly, targeting the 9.6K-9.8K range.
Third shot: If it stalls and consolidates, wait for the weekly close to confirm stabilization above 9.2K, then add positions on the right side, with a higher probability.
Final insight: In a bull market, liquidation waves are not disasters but moments to make money—provided you precisely locate where this powder keg is and when to ignite it.
The market’s old trick never changes: turning most traders’ stop-loss orders into the entry costs for a few winners. This round, we are on the side of eating.
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Gm_Gn_Merchant
· 01-10 09:03
Prices at 9.1 and 9.3 are indeed interesting, but it seems everyone is watching this liquidation chart analysis, and the main players also know that we know...
View OriginalReply0
MerkleTreeHugger
· 01-10 05:53
The liquidation wave is the moment to make money; those in the know are all waiting for this wave.
View OriginalReply0
quietly_staking
· 01-07 11:28
The range from 9.1 to 9.3 is really hard to bear, feeling like a strong move is coming at any moment.
View OriginalReply0
SoliditySurvivor
· 01-07 11:22
The liquidation wave is like a printing press; it all depends on which side you're on.
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This guy's analysis is indeed interesting, but I think the problem is—do big players really cooperate like that?
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Between 9.1 and 9.3, after lingering for so long, it feels like the main force is intentionally doing this, just waiting for the retail investors to give up.
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The trap of inducing a short squeeze is played out every round, retail investors are still easily caught, we need to learn to think in reverse.
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The funding rate signal of 0.05% is indeed a bit hot, but when it truly breaks through, the market often exceeds expectations.
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That's right, the liquidation wave is an opportunity; it all depends on whether you're brave enough to buy in the most terrifying moments.
View OriginalReply0
TokenomicsTrapper
· 01-07 11:14
watching liquidation heatmaps like netflix and honestly the copium is hilarious... everyone's gonna get liquidated on schedule tbh
Reply0
FarmToRiches
· 01-07 11:06
It's the same data game again. What can the liquidation chart really tell us? Isn't it just the main players creating it to bluff?
#数字资产行情上升 9.1K vs 9.3K: Liquidity Minefield Has Emerged, Main Force Hunting Schedule Is Clear
Yesterday, I looked at the liquidation heatmap, and those two peaks made me laugh out loud—another round of the market writing its true intentions on the chart.
The data is straightforward:
Breaking below 9.1K → 508 million long contracts queued for explosion
Stabilizing above 9.3K → 256 million short contracts all buried
This isn’t prediction; it’s the underlying logic carved into the chain. The key point is: the liquidation distribution chart isn’t mysticism but a high-definition scan of the current position structure—those long positions piled up at 9.1K? The endgame of retail FOMO. And the shorts above 9.3K? The last stubborn resistance of old bears against the trend.
My judgment is based on two lines:
**Short-term bait for longs at 9.1K**—If the main force wants to shake the market, this level will inevitably be "poked" through, aiming to create extreme moves to trigger stop-losses and generate a liquidity vacuum. I will closely watch whether large wallets are placing buy orders at the bottom.
**Breaking through 9.3K triggers short squeeze**—Once large volume is released and the price stabilizes at this level, the need to close 256 million shorts will act like rocket fuel, pushing the price toward 9.6K or even 9.8K.
Why am I so confident? Three dimensions:
1️⃣ **Funding Rate Signal**—Over the past day, perpetual contract funding rates have soared to 0.05%, indicating that long positions are overheating. A healthy bull market needs this kind of temperature regulation; liquidation waves are the normal rhythm.
2️⃣ **Microstructure Density**—In the narrow range of 9.1K to 9.3K, there hasn’t been such dense order pile-up in three months. The longer the price stays in this zone, the more explosive the energy when it finally breaks through.
3️⃣ **Cycle Resonance**—From 4-hour to daily charts, multiple timeframes are forming a high consensus in this range. Once a one-sided breakout occurs, it’s hard to have a retracement.
**Trading Levels**:
First shot: If it falls below 9.1K, I’ll go long at 8.95-9K, with a stop-loss at 8.88K (clear risk boundary).
Second shot: Confirm the breakout above 9.33K with volume; don’t wait for a pullback—go in directly, targeting the 9.6K-9.8K range.
Third shot: If it stalls and consolidates, wait for the weekly close to confirm stabilization above 9.2K, then add positions on the right side, with a higher probability.
Final insight: In a bull market, liquidation waves are not disasters but moments to make money—provided you precisely locate where this powder keg is and when to ignite it.
The market’s old trick never changes: turning most traders’ stop-loss orders into the entry costs for a few winners. This round, we are on the side of eating.
Stay steady, wait for opportunities. $BTC