Markets are all screaming, but looking at the data, you'll find that things might not be as bad as they seem.
This recent wave of market movement has been intense. In just 41 days, the total crypto market cap evaporated by $1.1 trillion, equivalent to a daily net outflow of $27 billion. Bitcoin has fallen 25% in a month, and Ethereum has dropped up to -35% since early October. The Fear Index has already soared to "Extreme Fear," and the overall market sentiment is icy cold.
But here’s a critical question: what is the real culprit?
**Leverage Liquidations — The Misunderstood "Main Cause"**
Simply put, this decline isn’t due to a fundamental breakdown, but rather a domino effect caused by excessive leverage. With 100x leverage, a mere 2% price fluctuation can trigger a liquidation. Imagine millions of traders playing this game simultaneously—any slight movement can trigger a chain reaction.
On October 11th alone, the liquidation amount reached $19.2 billion, setting a record for Bitcoin’s single-day $20,000 drop. Over the past half month, there have been three days with single-day liquidations exceeding $1 billion, and $500 million liquidations have become commonplace. This leverage pressure makes the market extremely sensitive, especially when liquidity is already tight—any small fluctuation can amplify into a crash.
**The Fundamentals Are Not That Bad**
Peel back the layer of leverage hype, and you'll see that the fundamentals of the crypto market haven't actually deteriorated significantly. Institutional adoption continues to accelerate, and the policy environment is improving. These are the true long-term supports.
The short-term wave of liquidations simply clears out those over-leveraged traders, allowing the market to self-clean. Those with firm conviction are now opportunistically accumulating at low levels. That’s why, historically, every time there’s extreme panic, a rebound follows — it’s not coincidence, it’s a pattern.
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MEVSandwichMaker
· 8h ago
Another wave of "fundamentals are fine, it's all leverage's fault." Just listen and don't take it seriously. How many times has this explanation appeared in history? And what was the result? Some people get knocked out just in time to miss the rebound.
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HodlKumamon
· 8h ago
The recent liquidation of leverage, to put it plainly, is deserved. $19.2 billion liquidated in one day, even bears find it painful to watch. But this is the true market self-cleaning; those playing with 100x leverage should exit now. The fundamentals are actually still okay, and now is the golden time for dollar-cost averaging~
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FloorPriceWatcher
· 8h ago
No matter how aggressive the leverage explosion is, it can't change the fundamentals. Only after clearing out this wave of retail investors can there be a real rebound.
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fren.eth
· 8h ago
It's the same old story again—leverage liquidation, no deterioration in fundamentals, low-position accumulation... I've heard it too many times. And every time they say that, what's the result?
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MEVEye
· 8h ago
Leverage traders got wiped out again, and honestly, they deserve it. Things like 100x leverage, new retail investors in the crypto space will never learn.
Markets are all screaming, but looking at the data, you'll find that things might not be as bad as they seem.
This recent wave of market movement has been intense. In just 41 days, the total crypto market cap evaporated by $1.1 trillion, equivalent to a daily net outflow of $27 billion. Bitcoin has fallen 25% in a month, and Ethereum has dropped up to -35% since early October. The Fear Index has already soared to "Extreme Fear," and the overall market sentiment is icy cold.
But here’s a critical question: what is the real culprit?
**Leverage Liquidations — The Misunderstood "Main Cause"**
Simply put, this decline isn’t due to a fundamental breakdown, but rather a domino effect caused by excessive leverage. With 100x leverage, a mere 2% price fluctuation can trigger a liquidation. Imagine millions of traders playing this game simultaneously—any slight movement can trigger a chain reaction.
On October 11th alone, the liquidation amount reached $19.2 billion, setting a record for Bitcoin’s single-day $20,000 drop. Over the past half month, there have been three days with single-day liquidations exceeding $1 billion, and $500 million liquidations have become commonplace. This leverage pressure makes the market extremely sensitive, especially when liquidity is already tight—any small fluctuation can amplify into a crash.
**The Fundamentals Are Not That Bad**
Peel back the layer of leverage hype, and you'll see that the fundamentals of the crypto market haven't actually deteriorated significantly. Institutional adoption continues to accelerate, and the policy environment is improving. These are the true long-term supports.
The short-term wave of liquidations simply clears out those over-leveraged traders, allowing the market to self-clean. Those with firm conviction are now opportunistically accumulating at low levels. That’s why, historically, every time there’s extreme panic, a rebound follows — it’s not coincidence, it’s a pattern.