#24hCryptoFuturesLiquidationsTop400M My Recent Trading Journey Through Market Turmoil


The past week has been an intense rollercoaster that tested every principle I have built over years of trading. When geopolitical tensions flared up and conflicting narratives started flowing from Washington, I knew we were heading into choppy waters. The market does not care about your analysis when macro headlines start dominating price action, and that is exactly what happened.
My Experience During the Recent Crash
I have been running a moderately sized portfolio focused primarily on spot positions across BTC, ETH, and a handful of altcoins that I believe have strong fundamentals. When the news broke about escalating tensions and the subsequent denial of diplomatic progress, I was already positioned defensively. Three days prior, I had reduced my altcoin exposure by about forty percent after noticing funding rates getting excessively positive and open interest climbing to levels that historically precede sharp corrections. It was not because I predicted this specific geopolitical event, but because the market structure was showing signs of fragility that made me uncomfortable holding full-sized positions.
When the initial drop hit and Bitcoin sliced through the eighty thousand level like it was not even there, I watched my portfolio shed value rapidly. The spot positions I held dropped between twelve to eighteen percent across the board. However, because I had already trimmed exposure and was not leveraged, I did not face any liquidation risk or forced selling pressure. That is the difference between discomfort and disaster, and it is a distinction every trader needs to understand intimately.
During the height of the panic, when Bitcoin touched that seventy-four thousand five hundred low, I made the decision to start scaling back into two positions I had been watching closely. I did not go all in. I deployed about twenty percent of my dry powder, buying in small tranches as price stabilized and volume started showing signs of absorption. The key was waiting for that stabilization rather than trying to catch the exact bottom. Precision in timing is a myth that costs traders more money than almost any other belief.
My Current Assessment of Market Conditions
The liquidation cascade that wiped out over four hundred million dollars and affected nearly one hundred thousand traders has done significant technical damage to the market structure. When you see that kind of forced selling, it creates overhead supply that takes time to work through. Every bounce higher will face selling pressure from traders who are underwater and looking to exit at breakeven, as well as from those who bought the dip too early and are now nursing losses.
However, there are also constructive elements to consider. The flush of overleveraged longs has reset funding rates to more neutral levels. Open interest has dropped significantly, which means there is less built-up pressure in the system. The market has gone from a state of excessive complacency to one of genuine fear, and historically, that transition creates opportunities for patient capital.
What concerns me most is not the technical damage but the uncertainty around the geopolitical situation. Markets can price in known risks, but they struggle with ambiguous outcomes and conflicting signals. Until there is clarity on how the current tensions resolve, we are likely to see continued volatility and false breakouts in both directions.
Strategic Considerations for the Current Environment
On the question of whether to buy this dip or remain patient, my view is that the answer depends entirely on your time horizon and risk tolerance. If you are a long-term investor with a multi-year outlook, current prices represent better value than we have seen in months, and gradually accumulating makes sense. If you are a shorter-term trader looking for quick gains, the risk-reward is less favorable because choppy conditions can chop up your capital even if the eventual direction is higher.
The approach I am taking is one of selective accumulation rather than broad buying. I am focusing on assets where I have high conviction in the underlying fundamentals and where the recent drawdown has created what I believe is a significant disconnect between price and value. I am also keeping substantial cash reserves because I expect there will be better opportunities ahead, either from further downside or from individual names breaking down while the broader market stabilizes.
Risk management remains paramount. Position sizing should reflect the volatility environment we are in, not the one we wish we were in. If your normal position size feels comfortable right now, it is probably too large. The goal is to survive periods like this with your capital intact so you can participate when conditions improve.
Practical Advice for Navigating Uncertain Markets
First, resist the urge to revenge trade. Getting liquidated or taking losses hurts emotionally, and the natural instinct is to try to make it back quickly. This is how small losses become catastrophic ones. Take time to process what happened, review your decisions objectively, and only re-enter when you have a clear plan rather than an emotional need to recover.
Second, pay attention to correlation. During stress events, assets that normally trade independently start moving together. Diversification fails when you need it most, so do not assume holding multiple altcoins protects you when Bitcoin is dropping twenty percent in a day.
Third, consider the source of your information. Social media during market crashes is a firehose of panic, misinformation, and bad advice. Everyone suddenly becomes an expert when prices are falling, and the loudest voices are rarely the most accurate. Curate your information diet carefully and focus on primary sources rather than secondhand interpretations.
Fourth, remember why you entered this market in the first place. If your thesis was based on long-term adoption and technological development, short-term price swings do not invalidate that thesis. If you were trading based on momentum and technical patterns, accept that those patterns break when exogenous shocks hit and adjust accordingly.
Fifth, and perhaps most importantly, preserve your mental capital. Trading is a marathon, not a sprint, and burning yourself out during volatile periods leads to poor decisions that compound over time. Step away from the charts when you feel yourself getting emotional. The market will still be there when you return with a clear head.
Reflections on Risk and Resilience
This latest episode has reinforced something I have learned through multiple cycles: the traders who survive and eventually thrive are not necessarily the ones with the best analysis or the most sophisticated strategies. They are the ones who manage risk in a way that keeps them in the game when conditions turn hostile.
I have seen talented traders blow up because they could not accept being wrong, because they sized positions based on hope rather than probability, because they let one bad trade cascade into a portfolio-destroying event. The market does not care about your intelligence or your track record. It cares about your discipline and your respect for the risks you are taking.
For those who got caught in this liquidation event, my advice is to treat it as tuition rather than tragedy. Every experienced trader has stories of losses that taught them lessons they needed to learn. The question is whether you extract the wisdom from the experience or just repeat the same mistakes with fresh capital.
For those who sidestepped the damage, resist the urge to feel smug. Markets have a way of humbling everyone eventually, and the conditions that protected you this time may not protect you next time. Stay humble, stay learning, and stay prepared for the reality that risk in this market is ever-present.
Looking Ahead
The coming weeks will likely bring continued volatility as markets digest geopolitical developments and traders reposition after the recent shakeout. There will be false rallies that suck in buyers before rolling over, and there will be panic drops that flush out the last of the weak hands before finding a bottom. Navigating this environment requires patience, discipline, and a willingness to accept that not every move is tradable.
My plan is to continue scaling into high-conviction positions on weakness while maintaining the cash reserves necessary to take advantage of further dislocations. I am not trying to predict exactly where the bottom is, because that is a fool's errand. Instead, I am building positions at prices where I believe the risk-reward is favorable over my investment horizon, and I am prepared to hold through further volatility if necessary.
To my fellow traders who are navigating these turbulent waters, remember that this too shall pass. The crypto market has survived countless shocks before, and it will survive this one. Your job is to make sure you survive it as well, with your capital and your sanity intact, so you can participate in the opportunities that inevitably follow periods of fear and uncertainty.
Trade wisely, manage risk ruthlessly, and never stop learning.
Yusfirah
#24hCryptoFuturesLiquidationsTop400M My Recent Trading Journey Through Market Turmoil

The past week has been an intense rollercoaster that tested every principle I have built over years of trading. When geopolitical tensions flared up and conflicting narratives started flowing from Washington, I knew we were heading into choppy waters. The market does not care about your analysis when macro headlines start dominating price action, and that is exactly what happened.

My Experience During the Recent Crash

I have been running a moderately sized portfolio focused primarily on spot positions across BTC, ETH, and a handful of altcoins that I believe have strong fundamentals. When the news broke about escalating tensions and the subsequent denial of diplomatic progress, I was already positioned defensively. Three days prior, I had reduced my altcoin exposure by about forty percent after noticing funding rates getting excessively positive and open interest climbing to levels that historically precede sharp corrections. It was not because I predicted this specific geopolitical event, but because the market structure was showing signs of fragility that made me uncomfortable holding full-sized positions.

When the initial drop hit and Bitcoin sliced through the eighty thousand level like it was not even there, I watched my portfolio shed value rapidly. The spot positions I held dropped between twelve to eighteen percent across the board. However, because I had already trimmed exposure and was not leveraged, I did not face any liquidation risk or forced selling pressure. That is the difference between discomfort and disaster, and it is a distinction every trader needs to understand intimately.

During the height of the panic, when Bitcoin touched that seventy-four thousand five hundred low, I made the decision to start scaling back into two positions I had been watching closely. I did not go all in. I deployed about twenty percent of my dry powder, buying in small tranches as price stabilized and volume started showing signs of absorption. The key was waiting for that stabilization rather than trying to catch the exact bottom. Precision in timing is a myth that costs traders more money than almost any other belief.

My Current Assessment of Market Conditions

The liquidation cascade that wiped out over four hundred million dollars and affected nearly one hundred thousand traders has done significant technical damage to the market structure. When you see that kind of forced selling, it creates overhead supply that takes time to work through. Every bounce higher will face selling pressure from traders who are underwater and looking to exit at breakeven, as well as from those who bought the dip too early and are now nursing losses.

However, there are also constructive elements to consider. The flush of overleveraged longs has reset funding rates to more neutral levels. Open interest has dropped significantly, which means there is less built-up pressure in the system. The market has gone from a state of excessive complacency to one of genuine fear, and historically, that transition creates opportunities for patient capital.

What concerns me most is not the technical damage but the uncertainty around the geopolitical situation. Markets can price in known risks, but they struggle with ambiguous outcomes and conflicting signals. Until there is clarity on how the current tensions resolve, we are likely to see continued volatility and false breakouts in both directions.

Strategic Considerations for the Current Environment

On the question of whether to buy this dip or remain patient, my view is that the answer depends entirely on your time horizon and risk tolerance. If you are a long-term investor with a multi-year outlook, current prices represent better value than we have seen in months, and gradually accumulating makes sense. If you are a shorter-term trader looking for quick gains, the risk-reward is less favorable because choppy conditions can chop up your capital even if the eventual direction is higher.

The approach I am taking is one of selective accumulation rather than broad buying. I am focusing on assets where I have high conviction in the underlying fundamentals and where the recent drawdown has created what I believe is a significant disconnect between price and value. I am also keeping substantial cash reserves because I expect there will be better opportunities ahead, either from further downside or from individual names breaking down while the broader market stabilizes.

Risk management remains paramount. Position sizing should reflect the volatility environment we are in, not the one we wish we were in. If your normal position size feels comfortable right now, it is probably too large. The goal is to survive periods like this with your capital intact so you can participate when conditions improve.

Practical Advice for Navigating Uncertain Markets

First, resist the urge to revenge trade. Getting liquidated or taking losses hurts emotionally, and the natural instinct is to try to make it back quickly. This is how small losses become catastrophic ones. Take time to process what happened, review your decisions objectively, and only re-enter when you have a clear plan rather than an emotional need to recover.

Second, pay attention to correlation. During stress events, assets that normally trade independently start moving together. Diversification fails when you need it most, so do not assume holding multiple altcoins protects you when Bitcoin is dropping twenty percent in a day.

Third, consider the source of your information. Social media during market crashes is a firehose of panic, misinformation, and bad advice. Everyone suddenly becomes an expert when prices are falling, and the loudest voices are rarely the most accurate. Curate your information diet carefully and focus on primary sources rather than secondhand interpretations.

Fourth, remember why you entered this market in the first place. If your thesis was based on long-term adoption and technological development, short-term price swings do not invalidate that thesis. If you were trading based on momentum and technical patterns, accept that those patterns break when exogenous shocks hit and adjust accordingly.

Fifth, and perhaps most importantly, preserve your mental capital. Trading is a marathon, not a sprint, and burning yourself out during volatile periods leads to poor decisions that compound over time. Step away from the charts when you feel yourself getting emotional. The market will still be there when you return with a clear head.

Reflections on Risk and Resilience

This latest episode has reinforced something I have learned through multiple cycles: the traders who survive and eventually thrive are not necessarily the ones with the best analysis or the most sophisticated strategies. They are the ones who manage risk in a way that keeps them in the game when conditions turn hostile.

I have seen talented traders blow up because they could not accept being wrong, because they sized positions based on hope rather than probability, because they let one bad trade cascade into a portfolio-destroying event. The market does not care about your intelligence or your track record. It cares about your discipline and your respect for the risks you are taking.

For those who got caught in this liquidation event, my advice is to treat it as tuition rather than tragedy. Every experienced trader has stories of losses that taught them lessons they needed to learn. The question is whether you extract the wisdom from the experience or just repeat the same mistakes with fresh capital.

For those who sidestepped the damage, resist the urge to feel smug. Markets have a way of humbling everyone eventually, and the conditions that protected you this time may not protect you next time. Stay humble, stay learning, and stay prepared for the reality that risk in this market is ever-present.

Looking Ahead

The coming weeks will likely bring continued volatility as markets digest geopolitical developments and traders reposition after the recent shakeout. There will be false rallies that suck in buyers before rolling over, and there will be panic drops that flush out the last of the weak hands before finding a bottom. Navigating this environment requires patience, discipline, and a willingness to accept that not every move is tradable.

My plan is to continue scaling into high-conviction positions on weakness while maintaining the cash reserves necessary to take advantage of further dislocations. I am not trying to predict exactly where the bottom is, because that is a fool's errand. Instead, I am building positions at prices where I believe the risk-reward is favorable over my investment horizon, and I am prepared to hold through further volatility if necessary.

To my fellow traders who are navigating these turbulent waters, remember that this too shall pass. The crypto market has survived countless shocks before, and it will survive this one. Your job is to make sure you survive it as well, with your capital and your sanity intact, so you can participate in the opportunities that inevitably follow periods of fear and uncertainty.

Trade wisely, manage risk ruthlessly, and never stop learning.
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Falcon_Official
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LFG 🔥
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2026 GOGOGO 👊
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Just charge forward 👊
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To The Moon 🌕
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To The Moon 🌕
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