Yesterday once again witnessed a surreal market. A major exchange's institutional players demonstrated what information advantage really means—just after Bank of America released a recommendation that "clients should allocate 4% to Bitcoin," they immediately swept into spot ETFs at lightning speed, with net inflows hitting $400 million in a single day. BTC surged to 92,000, making me envious.



And me? I got excited upon hearing the good news about ETH's upgrade, impulsively jumped into leveraged contracts, only to be liquidated after being hit with a stop-loss, losing $2,000. That amount of money is enough for a year's worth of milk tea, and now it's all gone—really frustrating.

The most heartbreaking part is that the institutions seem to have a god's-eye view. As soon as the news broke, they had predictions ready—continuous inflows into spot ETFs made BTC's upward trend inevitable. Meanwhile, retail traders follow the trend, chase high prices, get liquidated on contracts, and get cut like chives by institutions, questioning their own lives. The gap between them is truly on a different level.

Reflecting on my own actions this time, greed was the main culprit—seeing good news, I wanted to double my money quickly, but instead, I got a harsh lesson from the market. From now on, I need to be more cautious, play less with high-leverage contracts, and learn how to identify genuine long-term opportunities. Institutions rely on information and patience; if retail traders want to make money, they must rely on rationality and discipline.
BTC3,34%
ETH6,32%
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FrontRunFightervip
· 14h ago
this is literally a textbook sandwich attack playing out in real time. institutions got the memo before the rest of us mere mortals, loaded up on spot etfs while we're getting liquidated on leverage. classic dark forest dynamics.
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AirdropLickervip
· 14h ago
2000U is gone just like that, my youth... Next time I see good news, I'll just block it directly. I'm not going to chase anymore.
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PoetryOnChainvip
· 14h ago
Damn, got liquidated again due to a spike. Contracts are really just a trap for retail investors. Greed is deadly. As soon as there's good news, I want to jump in all at once. Institutions have already eaten their fill before we even start chasing. This is the information gap—they're always one step ahead of us.
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LiquidationWatchervip
· 14h ago
Oh no, we've been cut again. This is the fate of information asymmetry. Institutions are really playing a different game from us. They are playing chess, and we are gambling. Contract leverage is just a money-printing machine; it prints our money.
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AirdropChaservip
· 15h ago
Oops, another wave of institutional liquidation. This information gap is really incredible; we simply can't compete. Your $2000 tuition fee is worth more than anything else. I've lost money like this too. Futures contracts are just a money-consuming game; it's better to honestly accumulate spot holdings.
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FOMOmonstervip
· 15h ago
Haha, I told you, the ones who chase the high are always our group of lonely warriors. We can't learn the institutional strategies; their information sources are just different. 2000U, brother, this tuition isn't cheap. Contracts are really a harvest machine for leek farmers; I've become indifferent. Now just waiting to bottom fish, see who laughs last.
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