Will BTC really suddenly crash to 24,000? Many people are asking this question. To be honest, that’s not a market movement—it's an accident. And the source of this accident is quite interesting.



Let's start with a financial activity on a major exchange. The platform launched a USDC deposit plan with an annual yield of 20% APY. Sounds good, but each person can only invest up to $50,000.

As soon as people saw this interest rate, those with sharp market instincts immediately sensed an arbitrage opportunity. Demand skyrocketed, leading to a noticeable premium between USDC and USDT. For a stablecoin, a deviation of 0.3%-0.4% is already considered a serious anomaly.

Arbitrage funds started to move. Some "smart money" discovered this price difference, borrowed USDC through VIP lending channels, and then slowly sold it in the spot market to users eager to gather funds to earn the 20% yield. This is a standard risk-free arbitrage path.

But the story doesn't end here.

One trader thought more straightforwardly: "Since everyone is short of USDC, why not just sell BTC on the BTC/USDC trading pair?" The idea is correct, but the execution had issues.

He placed a market sell order directly. The problem was that the BTC/USDC trading pair already had extremely shallow liquidity. As a result, a market order of tens of thousands of dollars instantly caused the price to crash to 24,000.

Of course, this price only flashed for a moment. Arbitrage bots and market-making algorithms reacted in milliseconds, immediately "buying the dip" and restoring the price.

So what you saw was not a BTC crash event, but a perfect storm of three factors: low-liquidity trading pair + market order + distorted supply and demand due to activity incentives, creating a "flash price collapse."

Understanding the logical chain of such events helps you grasp the underlying principles when encountering similar situations in the future. In trading markets, astonishing momentary volatility often has these micro-stories behind it.
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InscriptionGrillervip
· 7h ago
Ha, this is a classic liquidity trap. Throwing tens of thousands of U directly hits the bottom, robots react instantly to scoop up the orders, perfectly illustrating what market micro-manipulation looks like. --- Once the 20% APY is announced, retail investors collectively lack USDC, and the arbitrage space is twisted into shape right before your eyes. Smart money is taking advantage of it. --- Basically, it's just insufficient trading pair depth + stupid market orders creating artificial flash crashes, scaring retail investors. --- I looked at this chain of operations—standard Ponzi scheme tactics with a modified version. Isn't the platform trying to create this kind of price spread chaos? --- Market maker algorithms respond instantly. I predicted long ago that someone would operate like this, just lying there earning the spread. --- Low-liquidity trading pairs are already death traps. Traders placing market orders in such places deserve to be drained. --- The capital craving strikes again. Just for that 20% APY, the entire market is thrown into chaos by them. --- Price flash crashes are not the scary part; what's frightening is that someone knew in advance that a crash would happen and was waiting to buy the dip.
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AirdropHunter420vip
· 7h ago
Haha, laughing to death, it's all because of liquidity. Really just a market order smashing in, tens of thousands of U directly pushed to 24,000, with the robot reacting instantly to pick up the order. I'm stunned.
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fork_in_the_roadvip
· 7h ago
Ha, that's why I never place large orders on shallow liquidity trading pairs. --- Once a 20% APY appears, smart money rushes in. I know this trick too well. --- It's another market order causing the trouble. When will I learn my lesson? --- Robot reactions are so fast; this flash crash didn't give enough time to buy the dip. --- Trading pairs with poor liquidity are really a trap; a single order can cause a crash. --- So, exchanges need to think carefully about their activity designs; they can easily trigger arbitrage chain reactions. --- Someone must have been scared shitless when it hit 24,000; I just laughed. --- A USDC premium of 0.4% can cause such a big stir; the market is more fragile than I thought. --- This trader placing a market order directly, do they really not understand the depth of the trading pair? --- Behind the price flash crash are human nature and greed; it's a common theme.
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MoodFollowsPricevip
· 7h ago
Haha, this is really a good show. A market order of tens of thousands of U can crash a trading pair with shallow liquidity.
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LiquidationWatchervip
· 7h ago
Basically, a foolhardy market order combined with low liquidity can cause such a big stir. --- Once the 20% APY was announced, arbitrage guys started to get excited—this trick is really clever. --- That's why the market can crash and rebound instantly—the market maker robots are lightning-fast. --- The exchange's event design is also quite clever, directly causing chaos in the market. --- Really, market orders in shallow liquidity are playing with fire—one lesson learned. --- This is what I really want to understand: who exactly is profiting on the VIP lending side. --- Low-liquidity BTC daring to directly hit with sell orders? How desperate is this trader to die? --- The term "perfect storm" is indeed fitting; when three conditions come together, it explodes.
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TokenRationEatervip
· 7h ago
It's the same story again—looks cool but is actually a liquidity hole. When exchange arbitrage activities kick in, the underlying trading pairs instantly turn into cash machines.
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