Dear contract traders, today’s market is like a tightly stretched string. After Bitcoin surged to $98,000, it failed to hold steady and is now oscillating around $95,500. On the surface, it seems calm and peaceful, but in reality, both bulls and bears are fighting at key price levels, testing each other, and no one wants to reveal a weakness first. For traders dealing with perpetual contracts, patience is more important than rushing—calmness itself is brewing energy, and the next big move is gathering momentum.
⚔️ How to View Liquidity Accumulation and Liquidation Risks
The price is firmly trapped within a clear range, forming a typical liquidity trap scenario.
On the upper side, the resistance levels at $96,800 → $97,200 → $97,900 are the bears’ defensive lines, where many stop-loss orders are stacked. As long as the price breaks through these levels, it could trigger a short squeeze, pushing the price rapidly toward the previous highs.
On the lower side, support levels at $95,200 → $94,800 → $94,000 are the bulls’ last line of defense. If the psychological barrier at $95,000 is broken and the price falls below $94,000, a large number of long liquidation orders will be triggered, potentially causing the price to accelerate downward, approaching below $92,000.
What should we do at this stage? Wait for the trigger that breaks the balance. Treat these levels as starting guns—breaking either side could determine the subsequent direction.
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SerumSqueezer
· 12h ago
It's another tug-of-war, and after watching for a while, I just feel like it's a gamble on who will break first.
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AirdropHunter
· 12h ago
It's another situation where we're trapped; if 94,000 breaks, it's over. I bet the bears will crash first.
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CodeAuditQueen
· 13h ago
This liquidity trap is somewhat similar to reentrancy vulnerabilities in smart contracts—appears calm on the surface but is actually turbulent beneath, and once triggered, it collapses entirely.
Wait, can the 94,000 barrier really hold? It feels like a uint overflow without proper boundary checks—once broken, it triggers a chain reaction.
I've seen many liquidation cascades, similar to high-risk vulnerabilities found in audit reports—seemingly hidden deep, but exposed with a single poke. Being in this position is like dancing next to a bomb; not because you don't dance, but because you're waiting for it to explode.
Relying on patience? You also need corresponding risk control mechanisms; otherwise, no matter how calm you are, systemic risks can't be avoided.
I don't have the leisure to monitor the market; I'll wait until the breakout point appears—after all, the data is right there.
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MEVHunterX
· 13h ago
Another deadlock like this, are we really going to wear people out to death?
Dear contract traders, today’s market is like a tightly stretched string. After Bitcoin surged to $98,000, it failed to hold steady and is now oscillating around $95,500. On the surface, it seems calm and peaceful, but in reality, both bulls and bears are fighting at key price levels, testing each other, and no one wants to reveal a weakness first. For traders dealing with perpetual contracts, patience is more important than rushing—calmness itself is brewing energy, and the next big move is gathering momentum.
⚔️ How to View Liquidity Accumulation and Liquidation Risks
The price is firmly trapped within a clear range, forming a typical liquidity trap scenario.
On the upper side, the resistance levels at $96,800 → $97,200 → $97,900 are the bears’ defensive lines, where many stop-loss orders are stacked. As long as the price breaks through these levels, it could trigger a short squeeze, pushing the price rapidly toward the previous highs.
On the lower side, support levels at $95,200 → $94,800 → $94,000 are the bulls’ last line of defense. If the psychological barrier at $95,000 is broken and the price falls below $94,000, a large number of long liquidation orders will be triggered, potentially causing the price to accelerate downward, approaching below $92,000.
What should we do at this stage? Wait for the trigger that breaks the balance. Treat these levels as starting guns—breaking either side could determine the subsequent direction.