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The game of drifting and entering: Game Station's massive stop-loss vs UBS institutional entry
Source: TokenPost Original Title: January 26 Commuting Podcast — GameStop Lost 100 Billion Yuan vs UBS Entering the Market… Chaotic Cryptocurrency Market in 2026 Original Link: https://www.tokenpost.kr/news/briefing/326318 On January 26, 2026, the cryptocurrency market plunged into chaos amid macroeconomic uncertainties and conflicting actions by major players. The possibility of a US government shutdown dampened overall market performance, with large-scale stop-loss actions on one hand and signals of traditional financial institutions entering the market on the other, making investors’ calculations more complex.
Market “Red Light” Turns On: $130 Million Forced Liquidation
Market sentiment is described as “thin ice.” Around 5 a.m. on the 26th, Bitcoin dropped over 3% compared to 24 hours earlier to $86,400, and Ethereum nearly fell 5% to $2,808. Mainstream altcoins like Solana (-7.42%) and Cardano (-6.6%) experienced even larger declines.
The steep decline triggered large-scale forced liquidations. In the past 24 hours, approximately $130 million (about 15 billion RMB) worth of positions in the derivatives market were liquidated. Notably, most of the liquidation amount, about $91.31 million, came from long positions expecting prices to rise. Market participants largely failed to foresee this decline and suffered heavy losses.
The main reason for the drop points to “US government shutdown” panic. The halt of government functions increased uncertainty in Federal Reserve monetary policy, strongly activating risk-averse psychology in assets like Bitcoin.
The Mystery of GameStop: 10 Billion Yuan Mysterious Stop-Loss
Market focus shifted to the actions of the “meme stock” symbol, GameStop. GameStop transferred approximately 4,710 Bitcoins (worth about $428 million) entirely into a Prime account of a major exchange. Typically, transfers to exchanges are interpreted as preparations to sell.
The issue lies in the timing of the sale. Industry estimates suggest that GameStop’s Bitcoin purchase cost was around $107,900. Selling at the current price of $86,000 would realize a huge loss of about $76 million (roughly 10 billion RMB).
Market doubts about GameStop’s intentions: Is it simply panic selling due to fear of further declines, or is it seeking new business opportunities with the raised cash? Unclear motives have increased market unease. Meanwhile, a major exchange’s newly generated anonymous wallet received a transfer of 40,000 Ethereum (about $115 million), with frequent mysterious large fund flows.
Retail Investors Exit, Giants Enter: Major Asset Management Bank Moves In
As GameStop shows signs of retreat, traditional financial giants are preparing to enter. According to media reports, one of the world’s largest asset management banks is considering offering spot trading services for Bitcoin and Ethereum to top Swiss clients.
This contrasts with companies troubled by short-term volatility, indicating that large financial institutions are viewing cryptocurrencies as institutionalized assets from a long-term perspective—a “power shift” is underway.
Extreme Predictions Clash: “Million-Dollar” vs “Party Over”
Experts have starkly different views on the market outlook.
Bullish side: Early Bitcoin developers compare Bitcoin to “a ball pressed into water,” claiming that once macroeconomic pressures ease, its value will explode, potentially reaching $10 million. The head of a major mining company also said “the bottom is near,” advising investors not to panic and to hold firmly.
Bearish side: Conversely, an analyst declared that “the crypto bull market has ended since 2026.” He pointed out that the approval of spot ETFs, a major positive, has been exhausted, and decreased volatility signals that new capital inflows have stopped. He recommends a “sell on rallies” strategy.
Technology and Regulation Strengthen the “Future”
Beyond price volatility chaos, technological and institutional infrastructure are steadily being built. The Ethereum Foundation has established a “Post-Quantum Security Team” to prepare for future threats from quantum computing.
Regulatory environments are also becoming more positive. The US Securities and Exchange Commission has officially withdrawn lawsuits against certain exchanges, and the former president has expressed willingness to sign the Cryptocurrency Market Structure Act. This will help reduce market uncertainties and promote institutional investor inflows.
However, security issues remain a challenge. Incidents such as the theft of 58 billion RMB worth of cryptocurrencies by internal personnel of US asset management agencies and hacking attacks on French tax reporting platforms serve as reminders of the importance of protecting infrastructure.
$130 million forced liquidation, hilarious, this is the daily life of the crypto world
If UBS dares to enter, I dare to short, institutional money is still money but not necessarily profitable
The government shutdown feels even more frightening than liquidation
Those who set stop-losses and those who enter the market look down on each other, I’m just here eating popcorn
Dancing on thin ice, exciting but a bit exhausting
Based on past experience, this rhythm will definitely reverse in the next round, just wait and see
While clearing out positions on one hand and布局 on the other, I just can't understand who is truly the smarter person.
$130 million forced liquidation? Oh my, more leek harvesting again.
It's already 2026, and this market is still so unpredictable. So frustrating...
UBS's timing for entering the market is quite deliberate. Could it be trying to catch the bottom?
Is the stop-loss panic genuine or just foresight? Feeling conflicted.
Forced liquidation is coming, and it's time to see who gets harvested...
The institution's move is quite ruthless, and retail investors are once again the cannon fodder.
Macroeconomic uncertainty + institutional interference, ordinary people should forget about catching the bottom.
If this show reverses, it might just be another round of being cut...
Old institutions really know how to pick the timing, UBS has timed the entry, while retail investors are still selling
130 million liquidation, just the beginning, the US shutdown might really be a show
Honestly, this market now is just a gamble, a cycle of big players retreating and small investors taking over
Is UBS's entry a positive signal or a warning? We retail investors really can't tell
The liquidation wave is coming, where is the money going...
Big institutions are entering against the trend, I choose to lie back and watch the show
Data shows that when institutions truly enter, retail investors often buy at the highest point.
It's the familiar pattern again, quite interesting.
Objectively speaking, the 130 million forced liquidation is the main culprit of this chaos; the entry signals are just afterthoughts.
I'm not trying to criticize, but anyone who experienced 2018 understands that when institutions "frequently signal" entry, retail investors should already be running.
Stop-losses and entry signals appearing simultaneously? That's a textbook case of market irrationality.
Data speaks for itself. During the last cycle when institutions repeatedly issued "entry signals," the liquidation rate reached 94%.
Ironically, the government shutdown became the best reason for shorting; with such tight liquidity, how can there still be talk of chaos?
Interestingly, large stop-loss traders often understand risk better than new entrants, but retail investors fail to grasp this logic.
This round of liquidation has just begun, there's more to come.
UBS entry signal? I'm wondering if it's to bottom fish or to harvest the chives...
Are institutions really brave enough to enter? The government shutdown can't even be handled, I don't believe it.
A massive stop loss on one hand and institutional layout on the other—this market's duality is incredible.
UBS wants to enter the market? Ha, then I need to be even more cautious with my position.
130 million liquidation... That number sounds painful. Luckily, I had already blown my position once before.
The US government hasn't even shut down yet, but the market has already closed—that's really something.
At this point, the hardest part isn't choosing the direction, but trusting whom.
Stop-losses are for stopping losses, and bottom-fishing is for bottom-fishing. As for me, this leek is just standing there dazed.
If traditional finance really comes in, us small retail investors will truly become a leek field.
Dancing on thin ice, but I've already gotten used to it.