How a Bot Uses Someone Elseโs Liquidation ๐ค
Look at the
$GRASS chart. Someone gets
#liquidated , price prints an #imbalance, and the bot enters only after the first small rebound.
Position size: around 1% of the account. ๐ฏ
Then the market gets hit by another shock โ
#US headlines, Iran, COVID, anything. Price moves lower. The bot does not average blindly.
It waits for the same setup again:
โข another
#liquidation โข another local inefficiency
โข another confirmed rebound
โข the same fixed DCA size
Each add is triggered by structure, not by distance. The total exposure is capped in advance, so the bot cannot keep averaging forever.
This
$GRASS trade needed four DCA entries. Capital pressure stayed low, average entry improved, and the rebound was enough to close the position cleanly. ๐
$GRASS is also not a random microcap. The bot supports whitelists and blacklists, so meme coins, low-quality tokens, crime-linked assets and other unwanted names can be removed before monitoring even starts. ๐ก๏ธ
Four controlled adds. Minimal pressure on the deposit. Clean execution.
Then repeat the same logic on the next imbalance. โ๏ธ