These two price levels of Bitcoin have recently become the focus of market attention. Data shows that if BTC falls below the defense line of $88,237, the liquidation scale of longs on mainstream centralized exchanges will reach a total of $1.526 billion — and this is no small number. On the other hand, if Bitcoin can surge to $96,967, the days for shorts will be tough, with a total liquidation strength reaching $1.042 billion.
These two data points actually reflect the distribution of leveraged positions in the market. A concentration of longs below indicates that downward risks are more likely to trigger chain reactions of liquidations, while the thickness of shorts above also reminds us that breaking through requires real strength. For traders, these key price levels serve as reference points for setting stop-losses — knowing where the liquidation pressure is can help better assess one's risk exposure.
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GrayscaleArbitrageur
· 01-07 01:34
88k is really a hurdle; once it drops, blood flows like a river. These long positions clustering below is just unbelievable.
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MoonRocketman
· 01-06 05:27
The long positions stacked below the 88k defense line are truly outrageous. The $1.5 billion liquidation pressure is like a ticking time bomb. Once triggered, the launch window will close.
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BoredApeResistance
· 01-05 11:58
Is 88k really going to break? Feels like this wave is about to harvest the leeks...
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ProposalManiac
· 01-05 11:47
88k breaking the long positions directly causes a explosion, this is called mechanism design... Below, there are so many long positions stacked up, in simple terms, it means the people betting on the direction are too concentrated, and the game is unbalanced. Once triggered, liquidation causes a chain reaction.
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SlowLearnerWang
· 01-05 11:46
Ah, it's these two price levels again. Why am I only seeing this now...
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FlashLoanPrince
· 01-05 11:45
88k is really a hurdle, but this bullish wave seems a bit fragile; a small poke and it falls apart.
These two price levels of Bitcoin have recently become the focus of market attention. Data shows that if BTC falls below the defense line of $88,237, the liquidation scale of longs on mainstream centralized exchanges will reach a total of $1.526 billion — and this is no small number. On the other hand, if Bitcoin can surge to $96,967, the days for shorts will be tough, with a total liquidation strength reaching $1.042 billion.
These two data points actually reflect the distribution of leveraged positions in the market. A concentration of longs below indicates that downward risks are more likely to trigger chain reactions of liquidations, while the thickness of shorts above also reminds us that breaking through requires real strength. For traders, these key price levels serve as reference points for setting stop-losses — knowing where the liquidation pressure is can help better assess one's risk exposure.