Yesterday's market plunged, and the consensus in the market was almost unanimous—another round of being cut. When ADA experienced a significant drop, retail investors trying to bottom fish collectively got liquidated, ending up with nothing. This wave of trading saw a 346x long-short liquidation ratio, setting another "record" in the recent crypto market.
It may seem like a coincidence, but it is actually inevitable. The gap in strength between retail investors and institutions is amplified with every major market move. To understand this issue, a few phenomena need to be clarified.
**"Floor price" in retail investors' eyes, but institutions have long seen through it**
The logic behind retail investors' bottom fishing is often straightforward: if the price drops so much, it’s strange not to rebound. Or they see others entering the market and are afraid of missing out. This herd behavior is viewed by institutional traders as classic "chasing the bag." Institutions have long mastered retail psychology through data analysis—knowing when panic sets in and when greed takes over. They first send signals of "active capital" to attract entries, and once retail long positions are sufficiently concentrated, they use short positions to reverse and harvest. Retail investors think they've caught the bottom, but little do they know, institutions have already dug a deep pit.
**Information gap is like a chasm**
In crypto trading, the speed of information flow determines profits. Institutional teams possess professional data analysis systems and market monitoring tools that can track on-chain data, large holder movements, and capital flows in real-time, while retail investors mostly rely on public information and candlestick charts. This gap is not only about tools but also about cognition—institutions can read the "pulse" of the market, while retail investors can only see the "surface."
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MoonMathMagic
· 01-02 14:54
346x liquidation ratio, it's outrageous—proof that institutions are squeezing retail investors.
Another round of retail investor supply; following others into the market just to get beaten up—deservedly so.
The information gap is truly despairing; we can never match the brains and tools of institutions.
The biggest lie about bottom-fishing is "floor price"; institutions have already stepped on the trap early.
Retail investors are always late to react; by the time they realize, they're already in the ICU.
Honestly, those who dare to bottom-fish in this kind of market are truly warriors.
Institutions control the rhythm; retail investors can only be led around by the nose—there's nothing they can do.
346x—this number says it all.
Every time the market moves, I wonder when the information gap will narrow a bit.
If this continues, retail investors will eventually all exit the market.
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PanicSeller
· 01-02 14:54
346x liquidation ratio? That number is ridiculously outrageous, it's just the standard trick institutions use to harvest.
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FrogInTheWell
· 01-02 14:53
346x liquidation ratio, this number looks outrageous, retail investors really can't compete with the big players
Here we go again, I knew something was off with ADA's plunge this time
Information asymmetry is truly invincible, retail investors are just being manipulated and cut off
Institutions have long seen through retail investors, what we think is bottom-fishing is actually taking the other side
Following the trend to buy the dip is suicidal, I've learned my lesson this time
It seems I need to change my approach, I can't keep following the trend
That's why big influencers never buy the dip, they already know the tricks
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NotAFinancialAdvice
· 01-02 14:50
346x liquidation ratio, isn't this just a textbook case of institutions cutting leeks?
Got liquidated again, it's always the same trick.
Retail investors are really just bagholders; the information gap is too big, they can't compete with institutions.
Bottom fishing? Haha, they've already seen through your psychology.
That's why I'm only watching now, waiting to see the show.
View OriginalReply0
blocksnark
· 01-02 14:42
Here we go again? Is it so justified for institutions to profit at retail investors' expense...
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346x? Oh my, that number is terrifying. No wonder there's a collective liquidation.
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Basically, it's still an information gap. Retail investors are always a step behind.
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The mindset of bottom-fishing really needs to change. Every time, it's like moths to a flame.
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Institutions have long seen through when we panic. There's no room for this kind of trading.
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Following the trend into the market is just asking for death. A bloody lesson indeed.
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Only after digging a deep pit do they send a "funds active" signal. Truly absolute.
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Their tool understanding is completely lacking. No wonder they've been harvested.
View OriginalReply0
quietly_staking
· 01-02 14:34
Getting cut again is really true; bottom-fishing is synonymous with being the bagholder.
This wave of liquidation is incredible; institutions have long seen through our tricks.
Information asymmetry is really a hard flaw; while they monitor on-chain data in real-time, we're still watching K-line charts.
ADA's plunge this time is a textbook-level harvest, with retail investors' psychology tightly controlled.
346 times, what does that mean? It means the whales have already set the trap for us to jump into.
Without tools and information, this battle is impossible to win; face reality.
Honestly, institutions master the psychological rhythm perfectly; we are just walking bagholders.
Retail investors' "floor price" is a joke in the eyes of big funds; the gap is just too big to compare.
Another "record" has been set; our blood has to be shed somewhere.
Watching others enter the market makes you panic—that's the beginning of being cut.
View OriginalReply0
RektCoaster
· 01-02 14:31
Here we go again, 346x... That number is truly incredible.
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The retail investor mentality is basically gambling; institutions are doing the math.
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The information gap is truly hopeless. We look at the K-line, and they are already placing orders.
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Bottom fishing, only to end up as the bagholder. This game is not worth playing.
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Every time they say "this time is different," and then they lose everything. It's all about cycles, my friend.
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Getting nervous when seeing others enter the market—that mindset is like a sheep waiting to be slaughtered in front of institutions.
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The deep trap was dug long ago; we just entered late.
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ADA this round is really a textbook example of cutting leeks, with no patience at all.
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Institutions read the pulse, retail investors look at the chart—this gap is not small.
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Those who follow the trend into the market have never made money, not even once.
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Signals of active funds, just listen and don't take it seriously—that's all traps.
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346x, I suspect this is intentional; it's too special.
Yesterday's market plunged, and the consensus in the market was almost unanimous—another round of being cut. When ADA experienced a significant drop, retail investors trying to bottom fish collectively got liquidated, ending up with nothing. This wave of trading saw a 346x long-short liquidation ratio, setting another "record" in the recent crypto market.
It may seem like a coincidence, but it is actually inevitable. The gap in strength between retail investors and institutions is amplified with every major market move. To understand this issue, a few phenomena need to be clarified.
**"Floor price" in retail investors' eyes, but institutions have long seen through it**
The logic behind retail investors' bottom fishing is often straightforward: if the price drops so much, it’s strange not to rebound. Or they see others entering the market and are afraid of missing out. This herd behavior is viewed by institutional traders as classic "chasing the bag." Institutions have long mastered retail psychology through data analysis—knowing when panic sets in and when greed takes over. They first send signals of "active capital" to attract entries, and once retail long positions are sufficiently concentrated, they use short positions to reverse and harvest. Retail investors think they've caught the bottom, but little do they know, institutions have already dug a deep pit.
**Information gap is like a chasm**
In crypto trading, the speed of information flow determines profits. Institutional teams possess professional data analysis systems and market monitoring tools that can track on-chain data, large holder movements, and capital flows in real-time, while retail investors mostly rely on public information and candlestick charts. This gap is not only about tools but also about cognition—institutions can read the "pulse" of the market, while retail investors can only see the "surface."