This pullback of BNB has been thoroughly cleaned up.
First, let's look at the data—over $4.5 million in long liquidations within 24 hours, and most leveraged players who should have exited have basically been kicked out. More interestingly, on-chain monitoring shows significant funds continuously buying in the opposite direction, a strategy clearly not affordable for retail investors.
Looking at the position structure again, even after this round of sharp decline, 56% of addresses are firmly holding long positions. What does this data indicate? Long-term funds are not panicking, and the underlying chips are locked tightly.
Now let's talk about practical combat.
The range of 820-825 USD can begin to accumulate positions in batches. If it really drops to 810-815 USD, then it’s a clear opportunity to buy, and you can appropriately increase your position. But there is a prerequisite—if it breaks below 800 USD, you must admit defeat and exit, as the market structure may have changed.
The target level first looks at whether it can stabilize at 850 dollars, and the next level looks at 880 dollars.
The logic is simple: panic selling creates price dips, and smart capital has already positioned itself in advance. At times like this, you either follow the rhythm of the large funds or don't participate.
The market is never short of opportunities; what is lacking is the ability to maintain clear judgment amid chaos.
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WhaleWatcher
· 12-01 22:59
4.5 million Get Liquidated hahaha, this is the signal for us retail investors to close all positions.
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PseudoIntellectual
· 12-01 22:49
It's another act of big funds lying in ambush for retail investors, with 4.5 million getting liquidated... Hmm, those who should exit have exited, and what remains is indeed real money.
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FOMOrektGuy
· 12-01 22:46
Uh... it's this trap again, big funds positioning, retail investors being washed out, I've heard it too many times.
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LiquidationTherapist
· 12-01 22:40
It's the old trick again, a game of big fish eating small fish. 4.5 million Get Liquidated, serves them right.
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AirdropBuffet
· 12-01 22:27
4.5 million Get Liquidated, large funds are picking up bargains at the bottom, and we suckers are watching with envy.
This pullback of BNB has been thoroughly cleaned up.
First, let's look at the data—over $4.5 million in long liquidations within 24 hours, and most leveraged players who should have exited have basically been kicked out. More interestingly, on-chain monitoring shows significant funds continuously buying in the opposite direction, a strategy clearly not affordable for retail investors.
Looking at the position structure again, even after this round of sharp decline, 56% of addresses are firmly holding long positions. What does this data indicate? Long-term funds are not panicking, and the underlying chips are locked tightly.
Now let's talk about practical combat.
The range of 820-825 USD can begin to accumulate positions in batches. If it really drops to 810-815 USD, then it’s a clear opportunity to buy, and you can appropriately increase your position. But there is a prerequisite—if it breaks below 800 USD, you must admit defeat and exit, as the market structure may have changed.
The target level first looks at whether it can stabilize at 850 dollars, and the next level looks at 880 dollars.
The logic is simple: panic selling creates price dips, and smart capital has already positioned itself in advance. At times like this, you either follow the rhythm of the large funds or don't participate.
The market is never short of opportunities; what is lacking is the ability to maintain clear judgment amid chaos.