Why Traders Get Liquidated Even When Right
Why traders get liquidated is a question that haunts many who open the case files of their failed positions. The detective did not like cases like this: no noise, no signs of a break-in, just another account gone overnight. But this case stood out because the trader was actually right about the direction, yet still lost everything…
The detective did not like cases like this.
No noise. No signs of a break-in.
Just another account gone overnight.
But this case stood out.
He flipped through the report:
position liquidated…
the market later moved in the right direction…
The detective paused.
So he was right…
and still lost.
He closed the file.
Now it was his case.
🔍 Clue 1: Being right means nothing
He started with the motive.
The trader was sure:
if he guessed the direction, he would profit.
The detective shook his head.
Too naive.
He wrote down three factors:
• direction
• entry timing
• price path
And underlined the last one.
📌 In the records:
Bought BTC at $30,000 → drop to $27,000 → liquidation → and right after that rise to $35,000
He was right, said the detective.
But the market does not have to wait until you survive the path.
🔍 Clue 2: Leverage
The detective quickly found the main tool of the crime.
Leverage.
It does not look dangerous until it is too late.
Facts:
• 10x → about a 10 percent move is enough
• 20x → only 5 percent
Bought ETH at $2,000 → $1,900 → liquidation → then price went to $2,400
It was not the idea that failed him.
It was the structure of the position.
🔍 Clue 3: The market is not random
The detective drew a line on the chart.
Price goes where the money is.
And the money is in stops and liquidations.
📌 Scenario:
• level break
• the crowd enters
• stops are placed
• sharp sweep
• then the real move
📌 Example:
$100 → $101 → $94 → $120
First they remove the weak.
Then they give the move.
🔍 Clue 4: Volatility
He opened the chart.
The market moved in bursts.
It never goes in a straight line.
📌 Even during a BTC uptrend:
minus 10 to 15 percent is a normal correction
For an investor it is acceptable.
For leverage it is fatal.
🔍 Clue 5: Position size
The detective found the key moment.
📌
• deposit $1,000
• leverage 10x
One wrong impulse and it is over.
He wrote:
Risk is not where the market goes.
Risk is whether you can survive a move against you.
🔍 Clue 6: Timing
He entered too early.
📌 BTC $30k → entry
→ drop to $25k → liquidation
→ rise to $45k
He saw the idea.
But did not wait for confirmation.
🔍 Clue 7: Psychology
The detective found the turning point.
The place where he could have exited.
But instead:
• minus 3 percent → ignored
• minus 7 percent → hope
• minus 12 percent → liquidation
The most dangerous phrase in trading, he said quietly,
I am right.
🔍 Clue 8: Cascade
The chart accelerated down sharply.
Liquidations trigger liquidations.
A domino effect.
He did not get caught in a move.
He got caught in an avalanche.
🔍 Clue 9: The main comparison
📌 BTC: $30k → $25k → $40k
Investor:
• holds
• profits
Trader:
• liquidated
• out of the game
The difference is not in analysis.
The difference is in survival.
🧩 Resolution
The detective stayed silent for a long time.
Then wrote:
The market does not punish for a wrong prediction.
It punishes for lack of risk control.
And added:
The winner is not the one who is right.
But the one who stays in the game.
🔑 Final clue: the tool that could change everything
He opened the case again.
And for the first time asked the right question:
Could this have been prevented?
The answer was yes.
But only if the trader thought differently from the start.
Beginners ask:
where will the market go?
The detective closed the notebook.
Wrong question.
The right one sounds different:
what happens if I am wrong right now?
And here comes the thing most people ignore.
A platform like Fybit gives a trader what the victim lacked:
• clear understanding of risk
• ability to control risk before entry and during the position
• a tool to manage liquidation price in the trade
It does not make you right, said the detective.
But it gives you a chance to stay in the game.
And in this business that decides everything.
🏁 Final
The case was closed.
Cause established:
not the market. Not randomness.
Risk that no one controlled.
The detective turned off the light.
He knew there would be a new case tomorrow.
With a new trader.
With the same ending.
Because in the market, the winner is not the smartest.
But the one who withstands pressure
and manages risk.
Related articles
Slippage & Liquidity in Leverage Trading
Understand how margin modes affect your risk and liquidation.
Safe Leverage in Crypto Trading
Learn how to use leverage without destroying your deposit.
