Seeing way too many posts rn trying to rationalize the drop. ""Is it Warsh?"" ""Is it the ETFs?"" ""Tech stocks?""

    Tbh it doesn't matter.

    When BTC wicks down to test $60k and SOL nukes 16% in a day, you aren't trading fundamentals anymore. You're trading a liquidation engine. The market is hunting leverage and the books are thin.

    Learned this the hard way last cycle. I had the right ""thesis"" (bearish), but when I tried to hedge during a flash crash, the network was congested, main exchange UI lagged, and by the time my order filled, slippage ate the whole profit. I was right but still got rekt because I couldn't move.
    Since then, my SOP for days like today is different. I don't look for news, I look for access.

    1. Stop trying to catch the knife on-chain during peak congestion.
      If you tried swapping SOL yesterday at the lows, you probably failed 3 times or paid a massive prio fee. When the chain is melting, on-chain is a gamble.

    2. Redundancy is the only ""safe"" asset.
      I never keep my whole stack on one venue anymore. Exchanges go down or lag when it gets volatile (saw that ""dirty tape"" yesterday). I keep a secondary account funded just for these moments. I use BYDFi as a backup (not a rec, just where I keep a spare clip) specifically so I can hedge immediately without waiting for a 45-min confirmation when the mempool is clogged.

    3. Check Funding, Not Just Price.
      Before you revenge trade a long because ""it looks cheap,"" look at funding. It flipped deeply negative yesterday. That means the market is overcrowded with shorts paying longs. Usually a signal the flush is mechanical, not fundamental.
      If you survived the last 24h without panic selling the bottom, you won. Don't try to be a hero and make it back in one candle.

    Hard truth: In a liquidation cascade, nobody cares about your "thesis." You only need execution.
    byu/tyrex93 inCryptoMarkets



    Posted by tyrex93

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