#美国贸易赤字状况 The true attitude of the funds has been exposed.
In the recent half-day market, the direction of large transactions is clearly unbalanced—sell orders have smashed out about $149 million, while buy orders are only around $48 million, with the buy-sell ratio directly reaching 1:3. The main force's choice of approach is very clear.
And this is not all. Last night, in the futures market, two nearly $13 million block trades appeared. This is not a gentle correction; it looks more like someone intentionally suppressing the market sentiment.
$BTC $ETH $SOL The reactions of these main cryptocurrencies vary, and the underlying capital game logic is worth pondering. When large orders tilt so strongly in one direction, market participants need to interpret this signal carefully. Ultimately, it depends on their own risk appetite.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
9 Likes
Reward
9
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
Layer3Dreamer
· 9h ago
theoretically speaking, if we model these order flow asymmetries through a recursive state verification lens... the 1:3 buy/sell ratio actually mirrors what happens in cross-rollup liquidity fragmentation. when capital vectors diverge this sharply, it's not just market sentiment—it's literally exposing the interoperability gaps between CEX and on-chain settlement layers.
Reply0
pvt_key_collector
· 9h ago
Sell orders of 149 million against buy orders of 48 million, the ratio is outrageous, the main force is clearly offloading
This rhythm is off, those two 13 million dump orders in the futures market are really aggressive
How BTC moves this time depends on whether it can hold the support, SOL hasn't shown any reaction at all
Dump orders suppress sentiment, this routine is back again, still depends on whether you can hold it or not
1:3 buy-sell ratio… is the main force full and wanting to run?
View OriginalReply0
SelfMadeRuggee
· 9h ago
A 1:3 ratio is a bit outrageous, this is a heavy hit.
Using large orders to suppress emotions is a pretty slick tactic, let's see who backs down first.
Big funds are fleeing, retail investors are still in a daze.
Those two contracts worth 13 million each, are they trying to break through with bloodshed?
$BTC recently, what's the reaction? Feels like today's drama is a bit off.
View OriginalReply0
DAOdreamer
· 10h ago
Sell orders 149 million vs buy orders 48 million, this buy-sell ratio is incredible. What are the main players doing?
I've seen too many tricks of smashing orders to suppress emotions. The key still depends on how you play.
A 1:3 ratio, this isn't a coincidence, feels like someone is hinting at something.
Last night’s two 13 million smashing orders, the contract market is really fierce.
BTC and SOL reacting so differently, the underlying logic is definitely worth analyzing.
The main players' intentions are the key; retail investors should just follow their risk preferences.
This market rhythm feels a bit strange, like funds are dancing.
#美国贸易赤字状况 The true attitude of the funds has been exposed.
In the recent half-day market, the direction of large transactions is clearly unbalanced—sell orders have smashed out about $149 million, while buy orders are only around $48 million, with the buy-sell ratio directly reaching 1:3. The main force's choice of approach is very clear.
And this is not all. Last night, in the futures market, two nearly $13 million block trades appeared. This is not a gentle correction; it looks more like someone intentionally suppressing the market sentiment.
$BTC $ETH $SOL The reactions of these main cryptocurrencies vary, and the underlying capital game logic is worth pondering. When large orders tilt so strongly in one direction, market participants need to interpret this signal carefully. Ultimately, it depends on their own risk appetite.