The more desperate the call for orders, the closer it is to liquidation.
Recently, there's been a lot of buzz in the community. A well-known trading account agent, with an unrealized loss of over $78 million, is still publicly calling for Bitcoin to hit 106,000 and Ethereum to reach 4,500. This guy's trading style is indeed aggressive—while passionately calling for longs, his own managed accounts are bleeding: he’s holding a 20x leveraged long on SOL, now nearly 300% in loss; his Ethereum long with over 5x leverage has dropped 58%; overall unrealized losses amount to $78.3 million.
Who is this guy? Former CEO of BitForex exchange, now the public spokesperson for a mysterious whale account. What really sparks discussion is the operation of this whale address. In October 2025, on the eve of Trump’s announcement of tariff policies, this address precisely shorted Bitcoin and made nearly $100 million. Coincidence? The timing was so precise down to the minute that some market observers suspect he might have access to non-public information.
Even more astonishing is that this whale address itself is quite suspicious—unused for 8 years, it suddenly wakes up holding over 50,000 Bitcoin, making it a true early big holder. Garrett Jin, as its public agent, naturally has every word he says wrapped in an "insider info" aura.
But now, that aura has dimmed a bit. High leverage longs facing market corrections have turned unrealized gains into reality—account losses are now real. This case serves as a warning to everyone: no matter how famous or storied an account is, it remains vulnerable under high leverage. If the market moves against your position, millions of dollars can disappear in an instant. More important than calling orders is risk control and stop-loss.
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RugDocScientist
· 5h ago
Haha, this is the legendary tough-talking yet guilty conscience—shouting one moment and losing so much that even your underwear is gone.
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$78 million floating loss still dares to publicly call trades; I really respect this move.
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When the halo of insider information shatters, it's time to watch the show.
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High leverage, full long positions—this is it. Even the most awesome people have to kneel.
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The most aggressive call signals are often the most dangerous moments for an account. It's a pattern.
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This guy isn't trading; he's using his account as a reverse indicator.
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Early big players wake up, short and make 100 million; now calling for longs and losing 78 million. The market really knows how to play.
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OnchainArchaeologist
· 5h ago
The louder you shout, the harder you lose. This logic makes perfect sense... 78 million just evaporated, and you're still shouting 106,000. I truly admire this mental resilience.
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ImpermanentSage
· 6h ago
This is truly incredible, calling out trades until you get liquidated yourself—an actual textbook example.
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RiddleMaster
· 6h ago
The more aggressively you call out orders, the more severe the losses become. This rule is truly unbeatable.
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Still daring to boast about a $78 million unrealized loss every day, I really admire this mindset.
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Precisely timing the market to short and earn 100 million, then turning around to call for a long with over 70 million, how stable do you have to be to think like that?
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Facing a full position of high leverage long positions being smashed, losing tens of millions instantly—this is the reality.
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The former CEO has a whale behind him; listening to you in the market is pointless. Wrong directions are all illusions.
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An address that hasn't moved in 8 years suddenly awakens. The story sounds appealing, but unrealized losses in accounts are no joke.
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When it comes to calling orders, in the end, it's all about risk control and stop-loss, not just talking.
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On one side, there's a trap of $78.3 million, and on the other, still calling for Bitcoin to hit 100,000 or 160,000. This operation is truly incredible.
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Even the biggest whale accounts are just paper tigers in front of high leverage. We've learned many lessons from this.
The more desperate the call for orders, the closer it is to liquidation.
Recently, there's been a lot of buzz in the community. A well-known trading account agent, with an unrealized loss of over $78 million, is still publicly calling for Bitcoin to hit 106,000 and Ethereum to reach 4,500. This guy's trading style is indeed aggressive—while passionately calling for longs, his own managed accounts are bleeding: he’s holding a 20x leveraged long on SOL, now nearly 300% in loss; his Ethereum long with over 5x leverage has dropped 58%; overall unrealized losses amount to $78.3 million.
Who is this guy? Former CEO of BitForex exchange, now the public spokesperson for a mysterious whale account. What really sparks discussion is the operation of this whale address. In October 2025, on the eve of Trump’s announcement of tariff policies, this address precisely shorted Bitcoin and made nearly $100 million. Coincidence? The timing was so precise down to the minute that some market observers suspect he might have access to non-public information.
Even more astonishing is that this whale address itself is quite suspicious—unused for 8 years, it suddenly wakes up holding over 50,000 Bitcoin, making it a true early big holder. Garrett Jin, as its public agent, naturally has every word he says wrapped in an "insider info" aura.
But now, that aura has dimmed a bit. High leverage longs facing market corrections have turned unrealized gains into reality—account losses are now real. This case serves as a warning to everyone: no matter how famous or storied an account is, it remains vulnerable under high leverage. If the market moves against your position, millions of dollars can disappear in an instant. More important than calling orders is risk control and stop-loss.