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BTC Liquidation Heatmap | Multi-Exchange

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BTC Liquidation Heatmap | Multi-Exchange

🔍 This heatmap pulls volume data from Binance, Coinbase, and Bitstamp simultaneously to show you where the real liquidation clusters are sitting. Instead of guessing where stops might get hit, you get actual volume-weighted zones with a strength score that tells you which levels matter.

The zones change color based on how much volume is stacked at each level. Bright colors mean heavy liquidation potential, faded colors mean weak spots. Each label shows the volume size, a strength rating out of 10, and how far away it is from current price in percentage terms.

Works best on 4H/D1 timeframes for Bitcoin. The default settings are tuned for day trading but you can dial them up or down depending on your style.

⚙️Drop it on your BTCUSD chart and you'll see colored boxes above and below price. Purple zones are short liquidations (above price), teal zones are long liquidations (below price). The thermometer on the right shows you the intensity scale.

Labels show three things: volume amount, strength ranking, and distance from current price. A level showing "1.45B ||| Strength 8/10 ||| 2.34%" means there's 1.45 billion in volume weight, it's an 8 out of 10 in terms of strength, and it's 2.34% away from where you are now.

The strength ranking is calculated using a proprietary algorithm that weighs multiple factors. Higher numbers mean more likely to cause a reaction when price gets there.

Settings You Actually Need to Know

📊 Lookback Bars: How far back to scan for levels. Default is 1000 bars which gives you plenty of context without cluttering the chart.

Pivot Width: Higher numbers = fewer but stronger levels. Start with 5, bump it to 8-10 if you're getting too much noise.

Min Level Weight: Filter out weak levels by raising this number. If your chart looks messy, start increasing it by 100M increments until it cleans up.

Label Size: Set to Normal by default. Switch to Large if you're on a big monitor or Small if you want a cleaner look.

How to Use It

🎯 Look for clusters of high-strength levels (8-10 rating) near current price. Those are your magnets. Price tends to get pulled toward them because that's where the liquidity is sitting. When you see a 10/10 level a few percent away, that's your target or your invalidation point depending on which side you're trading.

If price breaks through a strong level with momentum, it usually means the liquidations got triggered and you're looking at a real move. Weak levels (1-4 rating) are more likely to get ignored.

The distance percentage helps you figure out if a level is even worth watching. A 10/10 level that's 15% away might not matter for your intraday trade, but a 6/10 level that's only 0.5% away definitely does.

Exchange Toggles

🔄 You can turn off any of the three exchanges if you want. All three are on by default because more data = better picture. But if you only care about Binance and Coinbase, just uncheck Bitstamp in the settings. The volume recalculates automatically.

What to Ignore

Don't trade every level you see. Focus on the ones with 6/10 strength or higher that are within 5% of current price. Everything else is just context. And if a level gets hit (price crosses through it), it'll fade out so you know it's done.

The thermometer on the right is just a reference. You don't need to stare at it, but it helps when you're trying to figure out if a level is relatively strong or weak compared to everything else on screen.

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