很大很大的橙子|Jan 30, 2026 03:55
If '1011' doesn't happen, it will definitely happen somewhere else - because the explosion point is not important, what's important is that the system has reached the stage of 'must be cleared'.
I am not quite willing to explain it as' a decline caused by Binance ', a more reasonable understanding is a typical break in the leverage liquidity chain: things only happen in that place, but the pressure comes from the system itself.
The black swan in the financial market is essentially a switch in risk regime:
In a steady state, people use linear risk models (volatility, correlation, slippage) to manage the world;
But once it enters a state of stress, the risk quickly becomes non-linear.
The accumulation path of black swan is actually very stable:
Low volatility → high leverage → high correlation → liquidity illusion → trigger → nonlinear collapse.
This is a self reinforcing feedback loop:
Price decline is not a reflection of risk, but rather a creation of risk.
What you think of as' liquidity 'can turn into:
1. Buying withdrawal (market making contraction)
2. Spread widening, slippage soaring
3. Thinning of order book
4. Any passive sale will become a 'smash through'
Then the market enters a very typical state:
It's not who wants to sell, but who must sell.
At this point, it is not meaningful to talk about "a certain point causing a decline" because the system has already entered passive deleveraging.
In 2008, it was not a sudden drop in US housing prices, but rather a match that could be lit after long-term leverage, mismatched maturities, and increased correlation.
True risk management is not about finding a 'scapegoat', but about identifying whether we are on the brink of transitioning from a stable world to an extreme world.
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