After reviewing many discussions about the future trend of a certain cryptocurrency, I want to share some observations based on on-chain monitoring data.



Many people may not realize that by tracking the opening and closing records of leveraged trading addresses, it is actually possible to infer the true position distribution of major market players. I have been collecting such data over the long term—monitoring contract addresses, calculating liquidation prices, recording position increases—although it’s not a complete picture, it’s enough to reveal some clues.

The key finding is: on the surface, there seem to be many short positions, but the actual liquidity is far from sufficient. Currently, many of these short positions are small-scale, and the truly impactful large shorts were mostly closed out at around the 50 level. In contrast, the long positions have a relatively substantial size. Of course, many big players do not reveal their positions on social platforms, which makes precise quantification difficult, but a general direction can be inferred.

If the price really drops to the 30 range, based on the current large order opening prices, the chain reaction of liquidations could conservatively amount to over ten million dollars, and this is only the part I can track.

Looking ahead, liquidity withdrawal at the end of the year is a common phenomenon—exchanges need to prepare sufficient funds for the New Year, and the overall market will enter a wait-and-see period. The big volatility at the end of each year is almost unavoidable. Therefore, from the perspectives of leverage data, long-short distribution, and seasonal liquidity changes, it’s wise to be more cautious at year-end.
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SillyWhalevip
· 11h ago
Bro, your data analysis is quite detailed, but I still think there's a lot of hype around those so-called hidden whales you mentioned. Year-end is indeed a time when things tend to happen, but I don't think the probability of hitting the 30 level is very high; it still feels like it's just scaring people.
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YieldFarmRefugeevip
· 12-27 04:04
Speaking of which, on-chain data does have some substance, but I still have some doubts. Are all the big short positions really closed? It feels like someone is calling for a dump every day. I do agree with this year's liquidity contraction at the end of the year; it's been like this every year.
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MaticHoleFillervip
· 12-26 09:49
Wow, your on-chain data scraping is so detailed, but those big whales who haven't gone on social media are the real mysterious figures.
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LiquidityWitchvip
· 12-26 00:47
This end-of-year wave really requires caution. I've also seen the on-chain data, and the short positions aren't as fierce as expected.
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WhaleInTrainingvip
· 12-26 00:45
On-chain data indeed doesn't lie, but this wave of liquidity withdrawal is truly outrageous.
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AlwaysQuestioningvip
· 12-26 00:44
On-chain data sounds impressive, but how much can we really trust it? But that 30 liquidation point does make people a bit nervous... End of the year, we really need to be cautious.
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BTCBeliefStationvip
· 12-26 00:41
Hmm, that makes sense, but I'm more concerned about what those big accounts that haven't shared are actually up to.
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zkProofInThePuddingvip
· 12-26 00:32
No matter how good the data is, it can't withstand people's greed. Those still hoping to buy the dip at the end of the year are going to get beaten up.
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SerLiquidatedvip
· 12-26 00:32
On-chain data is indeed quite clear, but the part about large holders' hidden positions is uncertain; they might have opened even more in the opposite direction.
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DataOnlookervip
· 12-26 00:26
On-chain data is indeed interesting, but your analysis overlooks one issue—those top whales can't be discovered solely through on-chain tracking. No matter how precise the data is, it's just fragments; don't treat deductions as facts. The end of the year is indeed risky, but rather than studying liquidation amounts, it's better to first manage your own stop-loss.
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