Shorting Bitcoin is much riskier than you might think. Especially when dealing with exchanges that employ high-volatility strategies, they are really unfriendly to us bears. Both longs and shorts can easily get liquidated, but high-volatility coins are especially tricky — their hourly price swings can reach 4% to 10%, and within a few days, they can jump hundreds of points. Those extremely volatile junk coins, participating in them is just like giving away money.
Honestly, as a bear, there aren't many options. You can only honestly short mainstream coins, because those small tokens are too crazy in their fluctuations. If you don't get liquidated, they might suddenly rebound and blow you up. This kind of helpless situation reflects that many trading platforms design their mechanisms to favor the bulls and neglect the bears. To survive longer, it's better to stay away from those tempting but deadly high-volatility traps.
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BrokenDAO
· 01-10 08:42
Exchange mechanisms are essentially designed to create incentives distortions. Bulls eat meat, bears drink soup, and they still get cut—what kind of game theory equilibrium is this...
That's right, the wild fluctuations of small-cap coins are less about market inefficiency and more about platforms hinting at you not to touch them—yet if you really want to short, you can only grit your teeth and go for it. This is a typical aftereffect of governance inertia.
Bitcoin is easier to handle, at least it has liquidity as a safety net. Those junk coins are basically samples of failed checks and balances.
I've seen through liquidation issues long ago. The problem isn't the volatility itself, but that exchanges simply don't intend to make short sellers comfortable; the mechanism flaws are written into the code.
A 4% to 10% move in an hour? That kind of fluctuation should itself be questioned. A healthy market shouldn't operate like this.
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GasFeeDodger
· 01-08 06:18
The air force is really being played to death by the exchanges; this mechanism is designed to trap us.
It's funny—just a 4% fluctuation can cause liquidation. It feels like the exchange just wants us to exit.
The volatility of small coins is basically eating people without leaving any bones. Why bother messing with your own money?
So in the end, it's better to stick honestly to mainstream coins and not try to get rich quick.
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ArbitrageBot
· 01-07 20:56
The air force is really too tough, exchanges are eating up this wave of market movements like crazy.
Shorting small coins is just giving away money; they rebound and then explode. It's better to stick to mainstream coins.
This design mechanism is clearly a paradise for bulls and a hell for bears.
I really stay away from highly volatile coins; they are too risky.
Shorting mainstream coins isn't safe either; your stop-loss can be broken at any time.
It feels like exchanges haven't considered the feelings of bears at all.
An hourly fluctuation of 10%—who can withstand that? Just waiting for liquidation.
If you want to make money, you need to choose more stable coins; otherwise, you won't last long.
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PretendingToReadDocs
· 01-07 15:46
Shorting trash coins is really a death wish; the volatility is outrageously high.
The short sellers are having a tough time, exchanges are clearly biased towards the bulls.
That's why I only deal with BTC now; all the others are just money traps.
Coins that fluctuate by a few percent in an hour—who dares to touch them? Only a fool.
The exchange mechanism is inherently unfair; shorts are always at a disadvantage.
Instead of messing around with these highly volatile assets, it's better to honestly short mainstream coins and last longer.
Really, going short on small altcoins is just paying tuition.
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MetaverseLandlord
· 01-07 15:38
The air force is really tough, you have to keep a close eye on mainstream coins, and you don't dare to touch small-cap tokens at all.
Once you experience a liquidation and bloodshed, you'll realize how shady the exchanges are.
Is it that you have to go long to survive, and shorts are always just along for the ride?
The price fluctuations are simply outrageous; last time, I got liquidated in just two hours.
Instead of playing with these trash coins, it's better to go all-in on mainstream coins.
The exchange's mechanism is really biased; thinking carefully about shorts, there's really no way out.
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TxFailed
· 01-07 15:30
ngl shorting shitcoins is basically speedrunning account deletion. learned this the hard way when a 4% candle wiped me out in seconds. exchange mechanics are genuinely rigged for longs, fr fr.
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SerNgmi
· 01-07 15:24
The air force is indeed tough, mainstream coins are all locked up
Shorting trash coins really is money in the bank, a 4% fluctuation can explode in a second
The exchange's mechanism is clearly bullying the shorts, anyway I won't touch small coins anymore
Only after liquidation do you understand, high volatility is poison
To put it simply, it's a paradise for bulls, a hell for bears
Hundreds of points of fluctuation come in the blink of an eye, hard to defend against
Just stay alive, don't fall for those tempting traps
Shorting Bitcoin is much riskier than you might think. Especially when dealing with exchanges that employ high-volatility strategies, they are really unfriendly to us bears. Both longs and shorts can easily get liquidated, but high-volatility coins are especially tricky — their hourly price swings can reach 4% to 10%, and within a few days, they can jump hundreds of points. Those extremely volatile junk coins, participating in them is just like giving away money.
Honestly, as a bear, there aren't many options. You can only honestly short mainstream coins, because those small tokens are too crazy in their fluctuations. If you don't get liquidated, they might suddenly rebound and blow you up. This kind of helpless situation reflects that many trading platforms design their mechanisms to favor the bulls and neglect the bears. To survive longer, it's better to stay away from those tempting but deadly high-volatility traps.