Some cryptocurrency friends trade ETH, and forced liquidations often occur in the range of just over 100 points. From my observation, many small capital players are in this position. This position is safe when the market is doing well, but it is fraught with risks during fluctuations, which can easily lead to losses and requires sufficient time to monitor. It is only suitable for ultra-short-term trading, specifically trades within 1-6 hours, not exceeding 12 hours or overnight. Due to the lack of sufficient fluctuation space for operations, it cannot withstand 1-2 support level pullbacks, and usually, market conditions can change within 6-12 hours.
For short to medium-term trends, generally, ETH should not stabilize before 4k; forced liquidations are best positioned at 3500-3440 or even below 3200, as this can protect against major downtrends without needing to reduce positions for short-term defense (extreme bearishness can drive prices down to around 3200, like the Japanese interest rate hike on August 5). You can buy back as much as you can during pullbacks. If forced liquidations are too close, you won't dare to add to your position during pullbacks; adding to your position will only raise the liquidation price, increasing risk. If you don't add, the price may rise, yielding smaller profits. After all, in a bull cycle, every drop is to facilitate a better rise; a drop is not a real drop but rather a way to accumulate and prepare for a higher peak, this type of drop is referred to as an 'ineffective drop.' #萨尔瓦多增持BTC #比特币市场波动观察 #PCE通胀降温 #市场调整後的机会? #加密市场盘整