Has anyone ever wondered why, after the liquidation of leverage, the coin pulls back? How does all this work? Who are the whales and how do they operate? It's all about the physics of the process. I am ready for mutual cooperation and 'brainstorming'. I welcome people who critically approach publicly available information, who are meticulous and curious, and who love complex puzzles. I don't know if it's possible to leave contacts in the text of the post, so those interested can write in the comments, and we will come up with something. P.S. There will be no forecasts, predictions, or other nonsense. Just an attempt to understand the physics of how the exchange works and to analyze specific situations, sharing experiences.
It is obvious that money is leaving cryptocurrencies. From altcoins. And not into Bitcoin. The question is: where else can money be transferred aside from cash? What could explain such a phenomenon? Why are people panic withdrawing their money?
Do you trust a person who makes a post every 2-4 hours?
Sanchez_Erick
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Bearish
The crypto market needs a slight correction to move forward. Soon all altcoins will be 30-50% cheaper than the current price. A liquidation candle is approaching. Prepare yourself. High leverage will be risky. Most importantly, this is not financial advice, trade at your own risk. After all, it is you who clicks the 'buy' and 'sell' buttons. Do not blame others for your actions. Be responsible.
$PNUT Please note the time of the news release in Binance Square regarding copyright infringement and the lawsuit, as well as the time on the schedule. For the lazy: strangely coincided with the beginning of a bullish pullback with quite good potential. Draw your own conclusions.
$PNUT What do you think, why has the daily trading volume dropped three times (approximately from 350 million to 97)? What are the reasons in your opinion?
Who works with futures, please advise. During a margin call, the trader buys coins at the current market price. What happens to the coins during liquidation due to a stop out?
$PNUT clearly lacks liquidity. Oddly enough. The bullish trend is demolishing the stop-outs of shorts, but they are practically not being bought out. . . Or am I missing something. I would appreciate constructive criticism. P.S. It looks like the whale has either left us or does not want to buy out at such a price. They are hedging, gradually raising the price, but keeping the liquidity with themselves. Perhaps they are waiting for the cumulative, but they themselves do not want to participate in its growth. They are waiting for the hamsters to raise, and they will dump at the peak, selling out. In short, they are trading with themselves. The first time I noticed this. Let's see)
Is it possible to determine from "funds received in 24 hours" in the trading data? Right now there is one withdrawal of money, all in negatives.
Dewayne Fecto Bxm0
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I am not an expert, rather a beginner, but after investing in $PNUT , I noticed one thing. Observing the depth chart, I saw the classic behavior of a whale: accumulating a position, holding small orders in a price corridor, hunting for stop losses. Depending on whether the whale is selling or buying, there will be a squeeze for long or short. If they are buying more, there will likely be a squeeze upwards. Technical analysis and other methods are powerless here: they trade in small corridors and hold a large amount of currency in reserve to influence the market (the upward squeezes are their reserve purchases). Judging by the money flow chart in the currency from yesterday, there was a strong impulse, which was maintained by large sell positions. I managed to earn a bit on these swings, but I would like to earn more) In this regard, attention, question: how to determine when a whale is buying a position and when they are selling? How to understand that their reserve is depleting?
I am not an expert, rather a beginner, but after investing in $PNUT , I noticed one thing. Observing the depth chart, I saw the classic behavior of a whale: accumulating a position, holding small orders in a price corridor, hunting for stop losses. Depending on whether the whale is selling or buying, there will be a squeeze for long or short. If they are buying more, there will likely be a squeeze upwards. Technical analysis and other methods are powerless here: they trade in small corridors and hold a large amount of currency in reserve to influence the market (the upward squeezes are their reserve purchases). Judging by the money flow chart in the currency from yesterday, there was a strong impulse, which was maintained by large sell positions. I managed to earn a bit on these swings, but I would like to earn more) In this regard, attention, question: how to determine when a whale is buying a position and when they are selling? How to understand that their reserve is depleting?
Such a somewhat silly question. Maybe someone knows for sure in what units the volume is indicated: 1) In the capitalization of the coin 2) Inside the candle Thank you in advance