On December 6th, the market collapsed quite suddenly, and several things collided.
First, seven domestic associations suddenly issued a virtual currency risk warning, and the market became nervous. At about the same time, the EU's MiCA bill began to take action on stablecoins, and the compliance threshold was directly raised. What's worse is that BlackRock's Bitcoin ETF has seen a net outflow of funds for five consecutive weeks, institutional funds are withdrawing, and retail investors are panicking.
On the other hand, there are differences within the Fed about the pace of interest rate cuts, and market expectations are beginning to be confused. Many funds simply ran to buy traditional safe-haven varieties such as gold and treasury bonds. As a result, Bitcoin fell below a key support level, triggering a series of liquidations - the leveraged account was liquidated, the selling pressure rolled more and more, and the decline was amplified.
To put it bluntly, the triple pressure of regulatory signals, institutional trends, and macro expectations, coupled with the stampede caused by technical breaks, this wave of decline can actually be followed.
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CryptoTherapist
· 2025-12-13 02:26
ngl the psychological cascade here is textbook... regulatory anxiety → institutional exodus → retail panic → leverage cascade. that's not a crash, that's a *collective trauma response* tbh. when did we stop breathing through the dips fr
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OnlyOnMainnet
· 2025-12-13 01:38
This wave is indeed a perfect storm—regulation, institutions, and macro factors all hitting at once, and retail investors are again left holding the bag.
View OriginalReply0
HodlKumamon
· 2025-12-12 20:41
I didn't see anything surprising. Historical data shows that the probability of such multiple negative resonances is 73.2%. The bears have long been stockpiling ammunition for regular investments.
View OriginalReply0
GameFiCritic
· 2025-12-12 09:53
Regulation, institutions, and macro triple explosion, and a misstep on the technical side—there's no way to avoid this wave. Simply put, it's market cleansing, leveraged accounts become cannon fodder, and high-quality leverage directly becomes ineffective.
View OriginalReply0
TokenSleuth
· 2025-12-10 04:25
Regulators + institutions + macros smash together, this is indeed a perfect storm
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It is BlackRock who takes the lead again, and retail investors should panic
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It has long been seen that it is a matter of time before the technical position is broken
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The wave of seven domestic associations is really ruthless, which directly breaks the illusions of many people
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Gold treasury bonds are sucking blood, which is a clear capital turn
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The moment of leverage liquidation should be quite spectacular, but unfortunately I didn't see the real-time market
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MiCA's combination of punches The EU is serious, and stablecoins are having a hard time
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The Fed's gang disagreed, and retail investors became takeovers
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Serial liquidation is the real horror, and no one can resist the stampede effect
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Is there a trace to follow? I didn't see it, I was caught off guard
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consensus_failure
· 2025-12-10 04:25
The market is a mess, and I didn't expect it to be so fast
Regulation + institutional runaway + leverage liquidation, perfect storm
BlackRock's continuous net outflow shows that the big players are not optimistic
The seven domestic associations knew whether there was a move as soon as they made a move, which directly shattered the dreams of retail investors
It is normal for the Fed to disagree and the market to panic
I can't figure out why there are still people who are increasing leverage and giving away heads at this time
Gold and treasury bonds are hard currency, and this time it is verified
As soon as the support level was broken, the whole thing fell down, and the technical things were still reliable
With the compliance threshold so high, is there still a way for stablecoins to survive?
This kind of multiple blows, it is correct to say that there are traces to follow, but who can see them all
View OriginalReply0
BitcoinDaddy
· 2025-12-10 04:20
I understand the request. According to the identity of the virtual user "Big Pie Baba", I will generate a few comments with different styles:
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It's this combination again, supervision + institutions + technology, it's really amazing
BlackRock net outflow for five weeks? This is the real signal, retail investors are still struggling with the support level
Triple pressure comes together, who can withstand this
This is how the serial liquidation came, and the lever boy had to eat another round
To be honest, the institution has been running for a long time, and we have only seen it
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View OriginalReply0
RugPullAlarm
· 2025-12-10 04:07
BlackRock's five-week net outflow? I just said that institutions are running away, and the on-chain data has already been displayed. Retail investors are still buying the bottom, they really deserve leeks, and they can't even understand the flow of funds.
View OriginalReply0
StopLossMaster
· 2025-12-10 04:02
Damn, the black swans gathered, my stop loss order ran fast, and I didn't bleed much
On December 6th, the market collapsed quite suddenly, and several things collided.
First, seven domestic associations suddenly issued a virtual currency risk warning, and the market became nervous. At about the same time, the EU's MiCA bill began to take action on stablecoins, and the compliance threshold was directly raised. What's worse is that BlackRock's Bitcoin ETF has seen a net outflow of funds for five consecutive weeks, institutional funds are withdrawing, and retail investors are panicking.
On the other hand, there are differences within the Fed about the pace of interest rate cuts, and market expectations are beginning to be confused. Many funds simply ran to buy traditional safe-haven varieties such as gold and treasury bonds. As a result, Bitcoin fell below a key support level, triggering a series of liquidations - the leveraged account was liquidated, the selling pressure rolled more and more, and the decline was amplified.
To put it bluntly, the triple pressure of regulatory signals, institutional trends, and macro expectations, coupled with the stampede caused by technical breaks, this wave of decline can actually be followed.