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Someone doesn't understand why there are so many people trading cryptocurrencies, and how the big players can target specific individuals. Suppose the targeted person is called Zhang San. Let me explain the detailed process:
Let's assume one day Ethereum's price is 3000, with a long-short ratio of 6 to 4. Zhang San is holding a short position, and the big player (market maker) will cause Ethereum's price to drop to trigger a large long liquidation. Suppose it drops from 3000 to 2800. At this point, the long-short ratio becomes 4 to 6. The market maker is about to push the price up sharply to trigger a short liquidation, but Zhang San happens to be long, so the market maker shifts from the original plan of a big rise to sideways consolidation. After 1 hour, the ratio becomes 5 to 5, and the market maker continues to sideways trade. After 2 hours, the ratio shifts to 5.5 to 4.5, still sideways. After 3 hours, it returns to 5 to 5. The market maker, impatient, pushes the price up slightly to 2850 to lure more longs. Sure enough, many people chase the long, and the ratio becomes 6 to 4. Ethereum then drops from 2850 to 2600, with the ratio changing to 4 to 6. Zhang San closes his position to cut losses, and the market maker immediately pushes the price up sharply, say from 2600 to 2750. Now the ratio is 5 to 5. Zhang San chases the long, but the upward trend halts and consolidates. After 1 hour, the ratio becomes 5.5 to 4.5, and the market maker begins to push the price down. Suppose it drops from 2750 to 2650, with the ratio at 4 to 6. Zhang San adds to his long position, but the big player, instead of pushing higher, consolidates again. After 5 hours, the ratio is 5.5 to 4.5, and the price continues to fall from 2650 to 2450, with the ratio back to 5 to 5, then sideways for 24 hours, with the ratio shifting to 6 to 4, and the price continues downward. This cycle repeats over three months, with Ethereum's price dropping to 1500. At this point, the ratio is 4.5 to 5.5, Zhang San closes his position to cut losses, and the big player begins a strong rally. The price rises from 1500 to 1900, with the ratio back to 5 to 5. Just as Ethereum's spot price hits its peak and Zhang San is out of the game, the price surges from 1900 to 3000 in one month. The ratio then shifts to 4 to 6, with Zhang San chasing the long again. The upward trend abruptly halts and begins a small correction to lure more longs. During this correction, many traders who bought the dip are especially eager, so after 3 days, the ratio becomes 7 to 3, and a relentless downtrend begins. Until Zhang San closes his position or gets liquidated, the cycle continues.
Conclusion:
1. Only those who firmly believe that the crypto market is artificially controlled can ultimately survive. When your futures are liquidated and you blame it on bad luck, the outcome is already doomed. Even if you make millions in futures, you will eventually be targeted by the big players. One such incident can bankrupt you. If you have an unlimited "resurrect coin" that can keep generating funds, the big players will keep targeting you. If you die and blame bad luck, keep dying—hundreds of times—until you go bankrupt or realize that futures are manipulated. Only when you learn how to dodge bullets can you truly survive in the crypto world.
2. The big players use AI systems plus professional traders. No matter how extreme the situation, they have countless strategies. Currently, Bitcoin's monthly circulation rate is about 20%, with a market cap of roughly 300 billion USD. With just 50 billion USD, they could potentially control all Bitcoin. However, the big players like CoinB, An, and Leid have about 500 billion USD in controllable funds, with roughly 200 billion USD used to manipulate Bitcoin. This means Bitcoin still has a fourfold upside potential over the next 20 years, roughly reaching 240,000 USD per coin. Although it won't happen in the short term, the big players are always calculating that one day they will trap countless Bitcoin believers at the extreme price of 240,000 USD and then crash the price. Don't forget, their ultimate move is to borrow coins to smash the market—no matter how strong the buying power, they can instantly wipe it out. They could trap everyone at 240,000 USD for five or six years, waiting for most traders to cut losses before slowly rising again. But that 240,000 USD price point only occurs once; it may never be reached again. So don't blindly believe in Bitcoin, and the same applies to SOL. Don't expect SOL to reach 290 again, because SOL has already made hundreds of billions in profit. At worst, they can just release a new code to replace it.
3. Currently, Bitcoin is at 65,000 USD, trapping countless believers at 100K, 90K, 80K, and 70K. In the next two years, Bitcoin is unlikely to break through 100K USD for so many to be freed. It will most likely fall to around 18,000 USD, and many people needing urgent cash will be forced to sell at a loss. Only then might Bitcoin break through 100K USD. Believers should be mentally prepared.
4. I won't delete this post. I know many Bitcoin believers won't believe it. They think Bitcoin's rise is market-driven and that it will definitely surpass 1 million or even 10 million USD per coin in the future. They believe digital gold is becoming scarcer, demand is increasing, and prices will keep rising. But the problem is, once the market cap exceeds the control limit of the big players, it will be over. Let's see in ten years if my analysis is correct. I firmly believe I am right because only those who have experienced the big players' every breath can see these truths.