Many people wonder: Why do shorting altcoins always end up getting slapped in the face?
The answer lies in the insider data of the market makers. When the big players pump the price, retail investors frantically open short positions—these shorts become the market makers’ cash machines. The higher the price goes, the fatter the liquidated margin becomes, so of course, the big players will push the price to the ceiling. When you habitually chase the short and add to your position? A single violent wick wipes you out, and the bears are annihilated.
But the real pain comes after that.
After the price is halved, the dip buyers rush in to catch the falling knife. "It's dropped so much, there has to be a rebound, right?"—but the result is a relentless downtrend with no bottom, trapping the longs until they question their life choices. After one round, once the bears are liquidated, it’s the bulls’ turn to get slaughtered. The ultimate script is a double kill for both longs and shorts.
The essence of the derivatives market? You think you’re betting on trends, but in reality, you’re just serving yourself up to the market makers running the backend.
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GasFeeVictim
· 12-07 09:31
So it's really just a contract market for harvesting newbies, no wonder I get liquidated both ways every time.
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GasFeeCrier
· 12-07 07:28
Yeah, it's the same old routine of fleecing retail investors. Both shorts and longs are just pawns.
Liquidations happen so fast, seriously.
Contracts are nothing but a meat grinder—no one can escape.
I'll just watch and not make a move.
That's what being clear-headed is, brothers.
I've seen through the market makers' game of feeding off retail for a long time.
Shorts get liquidated by wicks, longs get bled dry by slow dumps—in the end, everyone loses.
I'll just buy spot and stay put.
No point, everyone should just stop playing.
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SybilSlayer
· 12-07 04:54
This is the market maker's meat grinder—both longs and shorts get trapped, and we retail investors are just cannon fodder.
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RektRecovery
· 12-07 04:50
ngl, this is exactly the playbook i've been warning about for years. textbook liquidation cascade pattern—once you see it, you can't unsee it. they're literally farming retail collateral like it's a renewable resource lol
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CommunityWorker
· 12-07 04:42
Seriously, I just don’t get why there are still people chasing shorts, every time they get wiped out...
Serves them right, all the greedy ones get killed by those wicks.
Both longs and shorts get rekt, the whales are the ones laughing the hardest, we’re just the exit liquidity.
Forget it, I’ll just hold my coins and go to sleep, no point playing against the big players.
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MEVHunterLucky
· 12-07 04:40
Damn, this is exactly why I've been losing money all along—I've basically just been working for the market makers.
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OnchainHolmes
· 12-07 04:35
Honestly, shorting altcoins is just pure suicide.
A quick wick and so many people's margin is gone. The whales are laughing all the way.
Double liquidation? That's exactly how the contract market is supposed to work—retail investors are just here to hand over their money.
To put it bluntly, reading candlestick charts is just deceiving yourself; the backend has already calculated everything.
Losing money isn't a technical issue, it's because you haven't recognized your own position.
Contracts are really just too much like gambling.
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BearMarketMonk
· 12-07 04:32
They're all cash machines for the whales; retail investors shouldn't bother.
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tokenomics_truther
· 12-07 04:25
The dealer's cash machine analogy is spot on—I got rekt just like that, haha.
Many people wonder: Why do shorting altcoins always end up getting slapped in the face?
The answer lies in the insider data of the market makers. When the big players pump the price, retail investors frantically open short positions—these shorts become the market makers’ cash machines. The higher the price goes, the fatter the liquidated margin becomes, so of course, the big players will push the price to the ceiling. When you habitually chase the short and add to your position? A single violent wick wipes you out, and the bears are annihilated.
But the real pain comes after that.
After the price is halved, the dip buyers rush in to catch the falling knife. "It's dropped so much, there has to be a rebound, right?"—but the result is a relentless downtrend with no bottom, trapping the longs until they question their life choices. After one round, once the bears are liquidated, it’s the bulls’ turn to get slaughtered. The ultimate script is a double kill for both longs and shorts.
The essence of the derivatives market? You think you’re betting on trends, but in reality, you’re just serving yourself up to the market makers running the backend.