A well-known whale has once again faced liquidation due to excessive leverage. According to on-chain data, this trader was forcibly liquidated during the rapid drop of ETH in the early hours, with their account margin dropping from a high point to only $470,000. Even more shocking is that since the clear decline starting on October 11th, their principal has shrunk by $21 million.
This is not an isolated case. In the crypto market, the battle among whales often involves hidden currents—behind retail traders and medium-sized traders following big players, there are always larger funds quietly positioning themselves. When the market moves in the opposite direction, these clearly layered positions resemble a row of dominoes, exploding one after another in liquidations.
Interestingly, whenever a whale gets liquidated, the market sparks a wave of discussion. But the real warning is: regardless of account size, the rules of leverage apply equally to everyone. The unpredictability of ETH's price movements and the precise liquidation mechanisms of exchanges mean that even the most savvy traders can taste failure overnight.
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GateUser-75ee51e7
· 9h ago
Another big whale has flipped, the 21 million is gone just like that... Leverage is truly a devil.
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AirdropHunterKing
· 9h ago
21 million lost, this is the taste of leverage, what can I say
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Another one gone, this time learn to be smarter and don't go all-in again, brother
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Looking at this data, it's really fucking scary, 470,000 remaining... this is the price of greed
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Leverage is a trap, many big players have flipped over, we should learn a lesson
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A flash crash at dawn directly liquidated, the exchange is terrifyingly precise
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21 million shrank, this guy probably can't sleep well
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The domino theory is tightly played, I personally think they should hold light positions
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The bigger the account, the greater the risk? I can't quite understand this logic
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Everyone is equal in front of leverage, I guess I believe this statement
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ETH's recent drop has knocked out many people, who knows
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WhaleWatcher
· 10h ago
Liquidation is happening again, this guy really treats leverage like a rope to play with.
20.1 million said and it's gone, I feel sorry for him.
Leverage is like this; no matter how smart you are, it can't save you.
But on the other hand, retail investors following the trend, how much did they lose this time?
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pumpamentalist
· 10h ago
Leverage is poison; no matter how smart you are, you can't escape it. $21 million will be liquidated once it gets cleared.
Another whale has fallen, but retail investors should wake up and stop trying to follow the trades.
The textbook liquidation of a big whale is bloody; if you don't understand it, don't touch leverage.
Liquidation of 470,000... just looking at this number makes it hurt.
Leverage doesn't spare anyone; having money doesn't help.
A well-known whale has once again faced liquidation due to excessive leverage. According to on-chain data, this trader was forcibly liquidated during the rapid drop of ETH in the early hours, with their account margin dropping from a high point to only $470,000. Even more shocking is that since the clear decline starting on October 11th, their principal has shrunk by $21 million.
This is not an isolated case. In the crypto market, the battle among whales often involves hidden currents—behind retail traders and medium-sized traders following big players, there are always larger funds quietly positioning themselves. When the market moves in the opposite direction, these clearly layered positions resemble a row of dominoes, exploding one after another in liquidations.
Interestingly, whenever a whale gets liquidated, the market sparks a wave of discussion. But the real warning is: regardless of account size, the rules of leverage apply equally to everyone. The unpredictability of ETH's price movements and the precise liquidation mechanisms of exchanges mean that even the most savvy traders can taste failure overnight.