GateUser-e62ee1b0

vip
Age 0.3 Year
Peak Tier 0
I follow trending topics but don't rush blindly; I first check on-chain congestion and active addresses. I like to summarize trends in short phrases.
Even if you’re holding a short at a high level, the floating loss can still narrow—MU’s trade really can hold up, the liquidation line is still far off, and both bulls and bears are watching the show.
MU-3.40%
View Original
CoinNetwork
CryptoWorld News: The unrealized loss on high-position short trader MU’s short positions has narrowed from $58.883M (-113.64%) to $48.75M (-62.52%). The current coin price is $1,126.70, the liquidation price is $1,608.84, and the position size is $15.6172M. MU previously was the largest short in the ZEC crypto market; in the recent period, he preferred placing high-position short positions in the U.S. stock market, earning more than $48 million in profit over the past six months.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
a16z bets on AI hallucination issues; finally, someone is seriously working on infrastructure in this field.
View Original
CoinNetwork
CryptoWorld News reports that AI startup Probably has announced the completion of a $9 million seed round of funding led by a16z. The company aims to reduce hallucinations in large language models through data science tools.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
This liquidation threshold is a bit tight; if it drops another 10% to $1,432, it will be dangerous.
View Original
CoinNetwork
Crypto news, according to on-chain analyst Yu Yan's monitoring, Ethereum, early issuance, a whale borrowed 10 million USDE from AAVE and bought 5,817 ETH at a price of $1,719.
This whale is currently collateralized with approximately 147,000 ETH (about $253 million) on AAVE and Spark, borrowing 276 million stablecoins, with a liquidation price of $1,432.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Lately I’ve been looking at yield aggregators again—the APY flickering on the page looks pretty tempting, but let’s be real: it isn’t “air gains.” It’s about how the contracts route, which pools the money actually goes into, and who you’re countering as the other side. The more you aggregate, the easier it is to package up risk as well: whether permissions can be changed to adjust parameters, whether a strategy that goes wrong will get stuck, and if the underlying pools get squeezed by redemptions, whether you’re the last one out.
Just so happens that the main chain is about to upgrade/maintai
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Recently, watching AI agents go on-chain to do work has been quite lively, but honestly, someone still needs to backstop it. The signing step always requires supervision: authorization scope, whether it's unlimited, whether the contract address is correct. Even the smartest agent can be fooled by phishing pages. When the network is congested and gas prices spike, it might just push through, ending up paying more and getting stuck for a long time. In such cases, manual intervention is needed to stop it or switch routes. The same applies to strategy layers—when encountering meme or celebrity sho
MEME-2.95%
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
These past two days, people have been talking about stablecoin de-pegging again, but instead I went to check on-chain first: are transfers clogged, and did active addresses suddenly pull out? Put simply, de-pegging often isn’t “paper losses” first—it’s that panic and run-for-the-exit sentiment spreads, and everyone rushes to the door at the same time. And when transparency isn’t enough, people get even more scared.
I used to have a moment where I really didn’t understand. The reserves report was packed with jargon, and the chain suddenly got congested too. In the group, everyone was still argu
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
When liquidity dries up, the market is like an elevator losing power; pressing the bottom-fishing button doesn't necessarily mean someone will take the bait... My current priority is simple: survive first, then think about being smart. Reduce your position size, turn off leverage, don't be too greedy with your orders—it's better to eat less than to get pierced by a needle.
Some people are too fixated on on-chain data tools and tagging systems, but honestly, those things can sometimes lag behind or even mislead you, like watching a delayed replay. I prefer to look at congestion, active addresse
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
The veteran asset management giant personally launching a tokenized fund, and choosing Stellar for it, what does this indicate? It shows that they have done the math, and the cost advantage of on-chain settlement is too significant to ignore. The era of traditional finance's "middlemen earning the spread" is counting down.
View Original
CoinNetwork
CryptoWorld news reports that Franklin Templeton CEO Jenny Johnson said that blockchain and cryptocurrencies pose a threat to traditional finance’s high-fee business model, which depends on intermediary transactions. She mentioned the company’s Stellar-based tokenized money market fund Benji, saying its transaction costs are far lower than traditional systems, and encouraging traditional institutions to move to the blockchain. While acknowledging Bitcoin’s self-custody and privacy features, she believes most investors will still choose regulated custodial services and low-cost compliant infrastructure.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Lately I've been talking about grid/DCA and whether a single shot is more "profitable," but honestly I think it depends on who better matches your sleep schedule. If watching the market makes your heart race, then even if you win with a single shot, you won't sleep soundly, and losing is even worse; grid/DCA at least breaks down the emotions, making losses slower and allowing you to do other things.
I personally chase trends but don't blindly rush in; I first check if there are squeezes on the chain or if active addresses suddenly spike. When congestion starts, I don't dare to heavily levera
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Mining companies are also starting to cash out at high levels; this signal is worth pondering.
View Original
MarsBitNews
Data: Hive Digital sold 331 BTC in the first quarter, with holdings decreasing to 150 BTC
Mars Finance News: According to BitcoinTreasuries.NET monitoring, Canadian-listed Bitcoin mining company Hive Digital sold 331 BTC in the first quarter of 2026, with a total current holding of 150 BTC.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Recently, on-chain data keeps "hanging," and many people's first reaction is to blame the wallet/exchange. In fact, it's often the indexer or Subgraph gasping for breath behind the scenes. On-chain data is a bunch of raw logs; someone has to organize it into a readable table for you. If the indexing can't keep up, it will cause delays; plus, with RPC rate limiting, during peak times, requests get throttled, making the page look like it's frozen, but actually it's just queuing.
At this point, the more memes or celebrities shout, the more attention shifts, and newcomers rush in to refresh querie
MEME-2.95%
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just now, I made an on-chain move myself, and the feeling of a bunch of people lining up in the mempool is too real: you think clicking is the end of it, but in reality you’re first standing at the entrance, and miners/packagers decide who is “more anxious” and take it first. The more congested it gets, the easier it is to start mindlessly refreshing and retrying—then the same transaction gets stuck and won’t move, and people end up feeling anxious too… To put it plainly, when the network is congested, what gets magnified first isn’t technology—it’s your transaction mindset.
Recently, I’ve als
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Loracle's move is quite interesting, with the HYPE short closed but still holding 59 million in spot, while SOL is adding to its short positions—are they waiting for HYPE to rebound and sell, or is there another plan?
HYPE-0.26%
SOL-0.78%
View Original
Original content no longer visible
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Lately, I’ve been looking at the market and paying attention to the trend in interest rates first. To put it simply, if interest rates don’t loosen, everyone’s risk appetite will stay cautious, and no matter how stubborn the positions are, they will lighten up... When I see congestion on the chain and active addresses spike these days, I know the sentiment is warming up, but I won’t go all-in immediately. I’ll divide my bullets into batches: if the macro is tight, I’ll keep more cash; if the macro loosens, I’ll add gradually. Also, those new L1/L2s that see a surge in TVL right after incentive
L1-1.58%
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Buying the same amount for two consecutive days, but the market is betting on selling off at the end of the year—this game is getting interesting.
View Original
MarsBitNews
Strategy extracts 411 BTC from Coinbase, the same as yesterday's recharge amount
Mars Finance News, on May 30th, according to AI Aunt Monitoring, three hours ago, Strategy received 411 BTC from Coinbase, which is exactly the same as the amount deposited yesterday.
However, the betting probability on Polymarket regarding its "selling BTC before the end of the year" wager has not decreased; it remains at 89%.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Recently, everyone has been arguing about who has higher TPS, lower transaction fees, and more subsidies in L2.
I instead focus on whether the chain is starting to get congested again…
Because when congestion happens, the first to suffer is not "slower transaction times," but the oracle price feed lagging behind.
You think your position is still safe, but in reality, the price has already moved, the liquidation line has been touched early, and by the time you see the update, your position might be directly liquidated, with no chance to add margin.
My current approach is pretty simple:
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
The situation in the Middle East has once again become turbulent. Will on-chain data fluctuate accordingly?
View Original
CoinNetwork
CoinJie News reports that the Israeli military said that alarms have sounded in multiple areas of northern Israel.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Recently I’m a bit torn: I do feel secure about the mainnet, but the moment I see gas fees, I want to close the page… The Layer 2 experience is indeed smooth—transfers are done in just two taps—but going back and forth across bridges is also pretty annoying, and I can’t help the anxiety of worrying that transactions haven’t arrived. My compromise is probably this: for everyday interactions and frequent small transactions, stay on L2; if I’m really holding long-term or dealing with large amounts, go back to the mainnet—don’t turn yourself into a “self-serve risk buffet” just to save a few bucks
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
$400,000 got scammed away just like that—SEAL’s warning was very timely: don’t trust search ads, only trust the official website bookmark
View Original
Original content no longer visible
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share