During the New Year's Eve of 2026, the crypto market experienced a severe correction. Bitcoin rapidly dropped from a high of $126,000 to $87,000, resulting in 164,000 accounts being liquidated, involving a total liquidation amount of $121 million. Among these, 106,000 traders had their positions completely wiped out, with average losses only in the thousands—these were not institutional whales, but ordinary traders who used their year-end bonuses or even mortgage funds to engage in leveraged trading.
Data reveals a phenomenon: 85% of the accounts that were liquidated held less than 1 BTC. Most of these traders believed in the notion that "5x leverage can double profits," but ignored a fact—institutional investors had already quietly adjusted their positions. Major funds like Grayscale showed obvious changes in their holdings, and a leading investment bank downgraded its recent outlook ratings. Meanwhile, derivatives trading volume surged to 72%, while spot market depth was insufficient, and this structural imbalance itself planted the seeds of risk.
From the price peak to liquidation triggers, a domino effect was evident. Retail traders experienced a process of adding to their positions—covering→adding→ultimately being liquidated—during the decline. When signs of a rebound appeared, trading volume was halved—no one dared to buy the dip, and the market fell into a strange silence.
Returning to a fundamental question: high leverage is essentially a synonym for high risk; high returns are often just a probabilistic illusion. When the next market rally arrives, how much volatility can your account withstand? Perhaps this correction is the market's most direct way of providing an answer.
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DeFiGrayling
· 01-08 22:52
Using mortgage leverage to buy coins—how desperate is that?
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AirdropBuffet
· 01-08 06:13
I was completely stunned during that re-entry, thinking I could buy the dip, but ended up getting liquidated instead.
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GmGnSleeper
· 01-05 23:52
Mortgage debt deleveraging, a bloody lesson, brothers.
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Same old story, institutions withdraw first, retail investors catch the bag last.
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5x leverage doubling? Laughing out loud, that's gambling not investing.
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106,000 people wiped out, this number is a bit terrifying...
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Derivatives 72%, spot market depth is insufficient, definitely a cut of the leeks game.
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Waiting for a rebound to buy the dip? Haha, everyone’s scared stiff, who dares to move.
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Using year-end bonuses to deleverage, really should reflect on this.
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When Grayscale quietly reduces its holdings, we’re still enjoying 5x leverage.
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The domino effect is well explained, one liquidation can bring down a whole chain.
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High leverage is like playing Russian roulette with your own principal.
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GasFeeCrier
· 01-05 23:52
Here we go again with the same rhetoric... Seeing that 106,000 people lost everything makes me want to laugh. Do they really think 5x leverage is a printing press?
Daring to go all-in with a mortgage—how clueless can you be?
Institutions already ran away, and we're still taking the hit. It's always the same routine.
Wait... derivatives account for 72%? Is spot trading so shallow? No wonder a single slap can wipe everyone out.
Retail investors are just here for teaching purposes; the tuition is never cheap.
The market is most terrifying when it's silent. No one dares to buy the dip, which means they understand everything.
I just want to know if those people kneeling and crying will dare to play with leverage next time... probably forgot again.
High returns are just a story; the risk is the real deal.
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HorizonHunter
· 01-05 23:45
Brothers using mortgage loans to deleverage... this is a real-life lesson.
During the New Year's Eve of 2026, the crypto market experienced a severe correction. Bitcoin rapidly dropped from a high of $126,000 to $87,000, resulting in 164,000 accounts being liquidated, involving a total liquidation amount of $121 million. Among these, 106,000 traders had their positions completely wiped out, with average losses only in the thousands—these were not institutional whales, but ordinary traders who used their year-end bonuses or even mortgage funds to engage in leveraged trading.
Data reveals a phenomenon: 85% of the accounts that were liquidated held less than 1 BTC. Most of these traders believed in the notion that "5x leverage can double profits," but ignored a fact—institutional investors had already quietly adjusted their positions. Major funds like Grayscale showed obvious changes in their holdings, and a leading investment bank downgraded its recent outlook ratings. Meanwhile, derivatives trading volume surged to 72%, while spot market depth was insufficient, and this structural imbalance itself planted the seeds of risk.
From the price peak to liquidation triggers, a domino effect was evident. Retail traders experienced a process of adding to their positions—covering→adding→ultimately being liquidated—during the decline. When signs of a rebound appeared, trading volume was halved—no one dared to buy the dip, and the market fell into a strange silence.
Returning to a fundamental question: high leverage is essentially a synonym for high risk; high returns are often just a probabilistic illusion. When the next market rally arrives, how much volatility can your account withstand? Perhaps this correction is the market's most direct way of providing an answer.