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Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion - page 27005. (Read 26623279 times)

N12
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The most hazardous thing about this is that not only do they need the price to increase, not only do they need the price to increase before it decreases, but they also need the price to increase within a certain time. A prolonged sideways movement would kill them as their liquidation price rises along with the interest. Can you imagine the pressure that must be felt?
sr. member
Activity: 364
Merit: 250
You borrow USD to buy coins.  You borrow coins to buy USD (this is shorting BTC).

Or you can borrow all available USD and not buy coins, just to deny these funds to real longs.  Then you can borrow all available coins and short, pushing the market down.  This would show as the market dropping due to a lack of buying, which is what TERA has been pointing at for a while now.

N12
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Activity: 1610
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looks like i still don't get clearly how usd/btc swaps works.
i tought that you "borrow" USD when you think btc will go down and btc when you think market will go up. The same you'll do with your bitcoins if you wanted to gamble the market but with less risk and less profit.
Now i see that USD swaps are way more than BTC swaps, to me this mean bearish sentiment, so why do you guys expect a "long squeeze" if the market is set up for shorting?
People are borrowing USD en masse (presumably to buy up Bitcoins) and the assumption is that most of this money is allocated in margin long positions. When the price decreases severely, a long squeeze can be initiated with a prone bid side on the order book because people will get their margin calls.

The opposite being people borrowing BTC and selling those but then the price increases and they get margin called.
full member
Activity: 139
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bitcoin hates walls
looks like i still don't get clearly how usd/btc swaps works.
i tought that you "borrow" USD when you think btc will go down and btc when you think market will go up. The same you'll do with your bitcoins if you wanted to gamble the market but with less risk and less profit.
Now i see that USD swaps are way more than BTC swaps, to me this mean bearish sentiment, so why do you guys expect a "long squeeze" if the market is set up for shorting?
sr. member
Activity: 364
Merit: 250
I wasn't implying this, I haven't explored this thought. If someone was manipulating this way, it would be extremely expensive to maintain with interest of 0.1-0.2% per day at least.

As long as the profit exceeds the expense, it will be done.  This is also a potential avenue for an entity like the Federal Reserve to disrupt the Bitcoin market.  They have unlimited USD at their disposal.

member
Activity: 150
Merit: 10
USD loans don't necessarily mean a long BTC position.
Correct. It also does not mean Bitcoin exclusively (some will be in Litecoin, but likely negligible). But they are usually so expensive to maintain that longer term they can pretty much be equated. And short term, we can assume that the vast majority is tied up in Bitcoin longs.

Are you guys implying that people are taking out loans and not using them for BTC longs, but instead just holding them? Why? To remove demand?


Or perhaps an effort to control price prior to an auction?
sr. member
Activity: 378
Merit: 250
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Wait, so why hasn't the price gone up? Doesn't that suggest that the borrowed USD is not being used to buy BTC?
N12
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Activity: 1610
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I wasn't implying this, I haven't explored this thought. If someone was manipulating this way, it would be extremely expensive to maintain with interest of 0.1-0.2% per day at least.

It seems to me those long positions have been built (in substantial part at least) below $600. Since finex allows only 2:1 leverage they not be zhou-tonged above $300. Correct?

1) 2.5 lever, I thought.

2) You're forgetting the substantial interest rate on USD

3) There might be some 'safety net' for the margin requirements... don't know. Any active finex traders can clarify?

4) I hoped as well that most of them got in sub-600, but I'm not so sure anymore.
Thing is that a cascade (positive feedback loop) can be triggered at a certain point depending on bid depth. So you'd need to know the point that would start the chain reaction, and not the point that the most optimal buyers (and yeah, interest rate goes on top of that) went in.
legendary
Activity: 1470
Merit: 1007
It seems to me those long positions have been built (in substantial part at least) below $600. Since finex allows only 2:1 leverage they not be zhou-tonged above $300. Correct?

1) 2.5 lever, I thought.

2) You're forgetting the substantial interest rate on USD

3) There might be some 'safety net' for the margin requirements... don't know. Any active finex traders can clarify?

4) I hoped as well that most of them got in sub-600, but I'm not so sure anymore.
donator
Activity: 2772
Merit: 1019
USD loans don't necessarily mean a long BTC position.
Correct. It also does not mean Bitcoin exclusively (some will be in Litecoin, but likely negligible). But they are usually so expensive to maintain that longer term they can pretty much be equated. And short term, we can assume that the vast majority is tied up in Bitcoin longs.

Are you guys implying that people are taking out loans and not using them for BTC longs, but instead just holding them? Why? To remove demand?
N12
donator
Activity: 1610
Merit: 1010
USD loans don't necessarily mean a long BTC position.
Correct. It also does not mean Bitcoin exclusively (some will be in Litecoin, but likely negligible). But they are usually so expensive to maintain that longer term they can pretty much be equated. And short term, we can assume that the vast majority is tied up in Bitcoin longs.

Could you use the extra buying power just to put up a fake wall?
Yes, as far as I know you can set up limit orders just fine with margin funds.
sr. member
Activity: 364
Merit: 250
Think about this for a moment.  If you wanted to keep BTC down and you ran out of BTC to sell, one option is to take all the USD loans without using it to buy BTC.  You are effectively denying others the use of those funds.  This would be a DOS attack on bitfinex's margin loans, effectively hamstringing the longs.

member
Activity: 150
Merit: 10
USD loans don't necessarily mean a long BTC position.
Correct. It also does not mean Bitcoin exclusively (some will be in Litecoin, but likely negligible). But they are usually so expensive to maintain that longer term they can pretty much be equated. And short term, we can assume that the vast majority is tied up in Bitcoin longs.

Could you use the extra buying power just to put up a fake wall?
N12
donator
Activity: 1610
Merit: 1010
USD loans don't necessarily mean a long BTC position.
Correct. It also does not mean Bitcoin exclusively (some will be in Litecoin, but likely negligible). But they are usually so expensive to maintain that longer term they can pretty much be equated. And short term, we can assume that the vast majority is tied up in Bitcoin longs.
sr. member
Activity: 364
Merit: 250
USD loans don't necessarily mean a long BTC position.
donator
Activity: 2772
Merit: 1019
This is insane.




So maybe that's how we're going to go up this time...

One huge short squeeze, when price gets near 530 again, leading to a drop into the 400s, and, hey!, we have our 2014 SR event Cheesy
You mean long squeeze.

It seems to me those long positions have been built (in substantial part at least) below $600. Since finex allows only 2:1 leverage they not be zhou-tonged above $300. Correct?
legendary
Activity: 1470
Merit: 1007
When do the squeezed longs become critical? Is there any way of telling?

Judging by this clown, at around $510 Cheesy
hero member
Activity: 614
Merit: 500
This is insane.



Maybe it's someone who found an exploit in the lending system? I read that there were some shenanigans going on there a couple of days back..
legendary
Activity: 1764
Merit: 1031
When do the squeezed longs become critical? Is there any way of telling?
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