UncleLiquidation

vip
Age 3 Year
Peak Tier 2
Living on the edge with 2.5x leverage and zero risk management. My liquidation price is my morning alarm. Currently in therapy for chart addiction.
I noticed something interesting about XRP. The market sentiment for the coin has dropped to a two-year low, and this looks like a rare contrarian signal. Over nine months, XRP has fallen 63% from three and a half dollars to the current 1.43. Small investors are finally starting to turn away from the asset.
Santiment posted a chart showing that the ratio of bullish to bearish comments on social media has dropped to 1.02 to 1.00. This is the third most bearish indicator in two years. Interestingly, this has happened twice before. In October 2025, it was 1.01 to 1.00, and then XRP rebounded. In F
XRP-0.55%
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I noticed something interesting in the news about Ripple. It seems they are seriously preparing the XRP Ledger for a future that’s already not far off.
The thing is, quantum computers are not just a theory. By 2028, the technology could take a completely new step forward, and Ripple is already thinking about it. They are developing quantum-resistant signatures to protect the ecosystem from potential threats.
What’s especially interesting is that they have an emergency migration plan, which they call Q-day. It sounds like a science-fiction movie, but in reality, it’s serious preparation for tra
XRP-0.55%
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I noticed an interesting point in the Cardano ecosystem. Charles Hoskinson has once again raised the issue of the most painful problem in the crypto industry, which has kept developers awake for years.
It's about the classic blockchain dilemma: how to achieve decentralization, security, and scalability at the same time? Usually, you choose two out of three. But it seems that Cardano is ready to offer a solution.
With the launch of Ouroboros Leios this year, Hoskinson states that the blockchain trilemma officially ceases to be a problem. It sounds ambitious, but if it works, it could truly chan
ADA-1.23%
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I've noticed an interesting thing with Bitcoin lately. It turns out that the crossover of realized prices between short-term and long-term holders is a really powerful signal for understanding where the market is in its cycle. Historically, when the short-term holder price drops below the long-term holder price, it usually indicates capitulation and the end of a bearish trend. And when it recovers above, a new bullish cycle begins. This was evident in 2015, 2018, and 2022. Currently, Bitcoin is trading around 78K, and the realized price of short-term holders is approaching critical levels. If
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I just read about the third robbery in Hong Kong within three months. This time, the police managed to prevent it — they detained two people at Sheung Wan station when they attacked people with a knife after exchanging 10 million Hong Kong dollars. The victims survived and were unharmed, but this is already the third incident in the same district of Hong Kong. The first was on December 18, the second on January 30, and now this one. All are connected to currency exchange offices. The police suspect organized crime and are looking for a link between the incidents. It's strange to see such a wav
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I noticed an interesting point in the latest comments from economists. Mark Zandi from Moody's Analytics talks about something like a tipping point in how companies are adopting artificial intelligence. Like Cortés' moment, when the ships are burned and there's no turning back.
The idea is that American corporations have already invested huge amounts of money in AI and restructured their operations, but productivity hasn't increased as expected. However, there's no going back — companies are too deep into this. Remember the recent 40 percent cut at Block. That's a sign that companies are start
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I noticed an interesting development with Jupiter. The team has proposed a DAO proposal that sounds quite ambitious — essentially, they want to almost completely eliminate the issuance of JUP tokens. It involves stopping the release of new tokens from the team reserve and forcing the treasury to absorb any unlocks of team tokens that enter the market. This is a serious move toward deflation.
The plan also includes delaying the scheduled airdrop of Jupuary and accelerating unlocks for Mercurial with appropriate hedging. It sounds like a comprehensive approach to supply management. The current i
JUP-2.27%
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An interesting study has been released by Brickken. It turns out that issuers of real assets are companies that issue tokenized versions of their assets—approaching tokenization quite differently than we thought.
The point is that most issuers see this primarily as a tool for raising capital, not for creating liquidity. The survey showed: 53.8% of participants prioritize capital formation and fundraising efficiency. In comparison, only 15.4% focus on secondary liquidity. However, the paradox is that 46.2% still expect their assets to become liquid on secondary markets within a year or a year a
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I recently revisited Nick Szabo's speech at the 2021 Bitcoin conference and understood why he is considered one of the key figures in the history of decentralization. Nick Szabo talked about how, in the mid-90s, ideas that seemed like science fiction were already being discussed in the Extropy magazine — virtual banks, distributed networks, systems without central control. At that time, all of this was in its very primitive stages, but the main thing was that people were thinking about it at all.
It was in 1995 that Szabo introduced the concept of smart contracts, which later became the founda
BTC-0.91%
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I noticed an interesting case in the market—Andrew Tate’s crypto trading status has become a topic of discussion among analysts. The guy fully wiped out his deposit on Hyperliquid and is now being called one of the most unsuccessful traders in the sector. Losses exceeded 800 thousand bucks. He started with an investment of 727 thousand, then tried to recover through referral rewards (75 thousand), but even that money ended up going into liquidation. Less than a thousand dollars remains in his account.
I analyzed his trading history via Arkham—everything there looks bleak. More than 80 trades o
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I noticed an interesting turn in the stablecoin negotiations. It seems there is a significant gap between what is being said in the press and what is actually happening.
Eleanor Therriet shared some intriguing information: several major players in the crypto sphere unexpectedly came out in defense of Patrick Witte and the administration's position. It all started when someone anonymously expressed pessimism regarding the progress of the stablecoin yield negotiations. The reaction was immediate.
According to ChainCatcher, one of the insiders from the banking world involved in the negotiations r
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Here's an interesting thing - I looked at Bitcoin's history and was truly amazed at how it all started. Bitcoin's price in 2010 was just laughable - around $0.28, and people were already mining and trading. By 2011, it jumped to $2.49, then grew more slowly. 2013 was a key moment, reaching $813, the first serious surge. After that, there were several corrections, but overall the trend was upward. 2017 was memorable - $8,771, everyone was talking about Bitcoin. Then a dip in 2018 to $4,000, but it took off again. 2021 hit a peak of $58,927, it seemed like there would be no end. 2022 dropped to
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I've noticed an interesting trend in discussions among digital asset market participants. Companies working with infrastructure and trading are increasingly raising the issue of problems arising with tokenized securities.
What's the essence? It turns out that when you try to work with such assets, you immediately encounter several obstacles. First, the costs are much higher than any investor would expect. Second—and this is the main point—the liquidity is divided and fragmented. Different platforms are incompatible with each other, which creates even more friction in the market.
Why is this im
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I noticed an interesting correlation in the market over the past few days. When the dollar starts to rise, crypto usually comes under pressure. Right now, the situation is just like that — escalating conflict in the Middle East is pushing investors to seek refuge in traditional assets, including the US currency.
This is a classic story: geopolitical tension plus a strengthening dollar equals capital outflows from risky assets. Bitcoin and altcoins feel this pressure especially strongly because they are perceived as more speculative instruments during periods of uncertainty.
Typically, in such
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Hyperdynamic update Hyperliquid promises to change the approach of experienced traders to position management. Soon, the platform will activate portfolio margin financing for real trading accounts, which could significantly ease the lives of those accustomed to working with large volumes.
The essence of the innovation is simple: instead of locking a separate collateral for each position, the system will start calculating the required collateral based on the overall risk of the entire portfolio. In other words, if you have opposite positions, they will offset each other. This allows maintaining
HYPE0.12%
BTC-0.91%
XRP-0.55%
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I noticed an interesting detail in the story of Bitcoin dropping below $60 000 in early February. Everyone was talking about macroeconomics and exits from spot ETFs, but there was actually another hidden force that significantly accelerated the crash.
It’s about market makers in the options market. To briefly explain, a maker is a market participant who constantly places buy and sell orders, creating liquidity and earning on the spread between bid and ask. They usually operate unnoticed, but sometimes their actions can greatly influence price movements.
Between February 4 and 7, exactly this h
BTC-0.91%
XRP-0.55%
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I noticed an interesting dynamic over the weekend — bitcoin pulled back to about 65.7 thousand after it tried to break the 70 thousand mark at the start of the week. It only held for 48 hours. Apparently, this was another market-consenus test of direction, and the outcome showed that the lower boundary of 60 thousand isn’t just a number on the chart.
Altcoins fell even harder. Solana dropped by nearly 7%, Ether slid by 6%, Dogecoin was down 5%. This wiped out all their advantages from the beginning of the week, even though spot bitcoin ETFs in the USA over three days attracted $1.1 billion. It
SOL-1.96%
DOGE0.32%
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I noticed a rather interesting pattern in the US labor market that could seriously turn the situation around for Bitcoin. In January, the number of announced job cuts more than tripled—reaching 108 thousand. This is the highest since 2009, when Lehman Brothers collapsed. Honestly, it sounds like an Asian-scale problem in terms of magnitude.
The most interesting part is the contrast. Official employment data look normal, but private indicators are screaming about problems. In just January, Amazon and UPS alone announced more than 50 thousand layoffs. Employers clearly had been preparing for thi
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You know, Kimbal Musk is actually an interesting character—one who is talked about far less often than his brother. Recently, he posted a rather sharp critique of Trump on X, saying that the latter supposedly introduced the biggest taxes in generations through his tariff policy. What’s funny is that Kimbal Musk, with a fortune of about 700 million dollars (, mostly thanks to Tesla shares ), isn’t shy about voicing his opinion, even if it goes against Elon’s position.
And here’s what’s interesting—brothers, despite disagreements over politics, are very close. Kimbal Musk and Elon are similar no
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I wonder how many people have already tried earning through NFT staking? I recently started exploring this and realized that there are really many interesting NFT platforms with staking features now. It used to seem complicated, but it turns out everything is quite accessible.
It turns out you can lock up your NFTs and receive rewards — these are not just crypto tokens, but sometimes exclusive gaming items as well. I started looking into which NFT platforms offer this. Here’s what caught my attention.
NFTX looks convenient — you can buy, sell, swap NFTs and stake at the same time. The control
BAND-2.17%
AXS-1.61%
SPS4.02%
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