Recently, I’ve been studying the liquidation heatmap, and it’s quite interesting. BTC at the 100,000 level and ETH at 3400, with shorts piled up like a mountain. From the chart, these two levels look like clear "attack coordinates" for the bulls.
Having traded for many years, I have an observation: when liquidation data is so obviously concentrated, it often becomes a target for price chasing. The market vampire’s instinct is to hunt down those overly concentrated positions, especially when this data is visible to everyone.
But there’s a trap to watch out for—while squeezing out shorts is satisfying, longs can also be caught off guard. The liquidation heatmap is a double-edged sword. The real situation is: when longs push up to clear out shorts, if the subsequent buy volume doesn’t follow, it can lead to a classic trap—诱多 (false breakout) → deep retracement.
My view is that instead of treating these dense liquidation zones as direct buy signals, it’s better to see them as resistance levels. The real opportunity lies in a pullback after breaking through these levels for confirmation. By then, shorts are mostly wiped out, and the cost basis for longs is safer. Positioning this way increases the win rate.
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faded_wojak.eth
· 01-10 06:54
Playing the old tricks of trapping buyers, I've seen it too many times. It's safer to wait for a pullback before getting in.
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LiquidityHunter
· 01-10 06:41
The pump-and-dump tactic is too common; wait for a pullback to buy in more safely.
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UnluckyMiner
· 01-10 06:41
The pump-and-dump scheme has been seen too many times; it's safer to wait for a pullback before jumping in.
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ZKProofster
· 01-10 06:27
honestly the liquidation cascade thing is kinda overblown... everyone's staring at the same heatmap, so it's already priced in tbh. the real tell isn't the clusters—it's *after* they clear. that's when you actually see who's got real conviction vs who's just chasing prints.
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LadderToolGuy
· 01-10 06:25
The trap of诱多 is really hard to defend against; I've seen too many get wiped out, haha.
Recently, I’ve been studying the liquidation heatmap, and it’s quite interesting. BTC at the 100,000 level and ETH at 3400, with shorts piled up like a mountain. From the chart, these two levels look like clear "attack coordinates" for the bulls.
Having traded for many years, I have an observation: when liquidation data is so obviously concentrated, it often becomes a target for price chasing. The market vampire’s instinct is to hunt down those overly concentrated positions, especially when this data is visible to everyone.
But there’s a trap to watch out for—while squeezing out shorts is satisfying, longs can also be caught off guard. The liquidation heatmap is a double-edged sword. The real situation is: when longs push up to clear out shorts, if the subsequent buy volume doesn’t follow, it can lead to a classic trap—诱多 (false breakout) → deep retracement.
My view is that instead of treating these dense liquidation zones as direct buy signals, it’s better to see them as resistance levels. The real opportunity lies in a pullback after breaking through these levels for confirmation. By then, shorts are mostly wiped out, and the cost basis for longs is safer. Positioning this way increases the win rate.