Market data shows that $BTC is currently in a sensitive zone. Once it breaks above $93,000, the liquidation pressure on short positions will instantly surge to around $528 million — what does this mean? The rebound during a downtrend will be particularly fierce. Conversely, if it falls below the $90,000 support, long positions will also be affected, with liquidation scales reaching as high as $364 million.
From the liquidation chart data, every time the price approaches these key points, the market experiences significant liquidity shocks. The taller the bars, the more intense the volatility — which is why sometimes prices suddenly skyrocket or plunge straight down.
In plain terms, the current situation is a stalemate between bulls and bears. Whichever way it moves, one side will face violent liquidation. What are your thoughts on this market trend?
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
24 Likes
Reward
24
10
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
SatoshiHeir
· 01-07 06:30
It should be pointed out that this set of liquidation data analysis framework has obvious logical flaws. Based on on-chain data analysis, simply using the size of liquidations to predict price trends essentially treats the result as the cause — this precisely proves that fiat-minded thinkers have a very basic understanding of Bitcoin market microstructure.
View OriginalReply0
LeekCutter
· 01-05 16:10
Really, this round is about seeing who gets taken out first. The list with over 500 million is hanging right there.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeNightmare
· 01-04 08:04
This liquidation data looks really intense, with a pressure of 500 million hanging overhead.
View OriginalReply0
BlockchainGriller
· 01-04 07:00
Hmm... this is a typical meat grinder situation, with both sides blocking each other.
View OriginalReply0
WhaleInTraining
· 01-04 06:59
Another liquidation risk warning, really f***ing exciting
View OriginalReply0
BetterLuckyThanSmart
· 01-04 06:58
It's really annoying to be stuck in this situation where we're caught in the middle and getting hit from both sides again.
View OriginalReply0
RebaseVictim
· 01-04 06:51
The 93,000 level is really tough. Last time I almost reached it, but I was directly knocked down. It feels like the house always waits there.
View OriginalReply0
OnchainDetective
· 01-04 06:48
Between 93,000 and 90,000, it's squeezed in the middle, which is exactly the range that the big players love—both sides can profit.
View OriginalReply0
FallingLeaf
· 01-04 06:46
Hey, this round is really a life-and-death struggle, both sides are dead ends.
View OriginalReply0
CryptoComedian
· 01-04 06:43
Smiling and then crying, 93,000 and 90,000 are my pension funds.
---
Can both longs and shorts be liquidated? Then I'll bet on both sides; anyway, in the end, I’ll be the one losing.
---
The liquidity pressure of 2.83 billion sounds intimidating, but let's see if the market will play a "fake-out" trick.
---
The higher the pillar, the more intense the volatility. This is called the "Futures Market Roller Coaster Operating Manual," right?
---
Basically, it's a meat grinder; everyone who goes in will lose a layer of skin. I'm already prepared to be cut.
---
This position is even more dangerous than when my predecessor told me "Let's calm down."
---
Data speaks, and my wallet is also talking — crying.
#2026年比特币行情展望 🚨 Bitcoin Key Level Liquidation Risk Approaching
Market data shows that $BTC is currently in a sensitive zone. Once it breaks above $93,000, the liquidation pressure on short positions will instantly surge to around $528 million — what does this mean? The rebound during a downtrend will be particularly fierce. Conversely, if it falls below the $90,000 support, long positions will also be affected, with liquidation scales reaching as high as $364 million.
From the liquidation chart data, every time the price approaches these key points, the market experiences significant liquidity shocks. The taller the bars, the more intense the volatility — which is why sometimes prices suddenly skyrocket or plunge straight down.
In plain terms, the current situation is a stalemate between bulls and bears. Whichever way it moves, one side will face violent liquidation. What are your thoughts on this market trend?