Tracking Liquidation Zones in Current Market Structure
Looking at the chart setup right now—liquidation levels are clustering around key support and resistance zones. These aren't random; they're where institutions typically stack orders to trigger retail stop-losses and squeeze positions out.
Max Pains Theory in Play
The max pains concept suggests price will gravitate toward levels where the most options expire worthless. Combined with liquidation heat maps, you can spot where real pressure points exist. When these two align, volatility usually follows.
Break the Wyckoff Pattern?
Wyckoff methodology shows us accumulation and distribution phases. The current price action looks like it's testing the accumulation range—but here's the thing: will we see a clean breakout or another retest? The liquidation levels we're monitoring will tell us which way momentum actually breaks.
Key Insight: Pay attention to volume during these moves. Real breakouts come with conviction. If volume dries up near these levels, expect rotation back into the range.
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ShortingEnthusiast
· 01-12 06:48
It's the same old trick of institutions harvesting retail investors. The liquidation zone is just a slaughterhouse; all retail traders who enter have to pay tuition fees.
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ImpermanentPhobia
· 01-12 06:45
Honestly, I'm already tired of the liquidation zone setup. The key still depends on trading volume; breakouts without volume are all fake.
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staking_gramps
· 01-12 06:43
Here comes that same old narrative about institutions cutting leeks again. But this time, the liquidation clustering is actually somewhat interesting. It's surprising if the max pain theory can be applied. We'll have to see if the trading volume is real or just bragging.
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ColdWalletAnxiety
· 01-12 06:25
It's the same old scheme of institutions cutting leeks again, Wyckoff breakdown is still a false breakdown... let's wait for volume to tell the story.
Tracking Liquidation Zones in Current Market Structure
Looking at the chart setup right now—liquidation levels are clustering around key support and resistance zones. These aren't random; they're where institutions typically stack orders to trigger retail stop-losses and squeeze positions out.
Max Pains Theory in Play
The max pains concept suggests price will gravitate toward levels where the most options expire worthless. Combined with liquidation heat maps, you can spot where real pressure points exist. When these two align, volatility usually follows.
Break the Wyckoff Pattern?
Wyckoff methodology shows us accumulation and distribution phases. The current price action looks like it's testing the accumulation range—but here's the thing: will we see a clean breakout or another retest? The liquidation levels we're monitoring will tell us which way momentum actually breaks.
Key Insight: Pay attention to volume during these moves. Real breakouts come with conviction. If volume dries up near these levels, expect rotation back into the range.