#大户持仓变化 $RIVER's recent rapid rally reveals hidden risks — although the price surged high, the trading volume didn't keep up, which is a typical divergence between price and volume. Looking at the high level, although there is increasing volume, the stock price remains stuck, often indicating that the main force is gradually offloading. Additionally, on the futures market side, long positions are quite full, and the funding rate is also at a relatively high level. Once the key support line is broken, it could very likely trigger a domino effect of liquidations. From a risk-reward perspective, the probability and magnitude of a downward trend are more worth paying attention to. In the market, to make money, you need to follow the right direction and clearly understand what the main force is doing — it’s much more reliable than blindly following the crowd.
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ZenChainWalker
· 12-16 10:00
I've seen this kind of divergence between price and volume many times. The main force just loves to trick retail investors into buying in this way. That move of trapping and increasing volume at high levels is really perfect.
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airdrop_huntress
· 12-16 09:59
The divergence between price and volume is old news; this wave of RIVER feels a bit risky.
The heavy selling by the main force is too obvious. I've seen too many scripts where high-volume stalls at high levels.
On the contract side, the longs are overfilled, and with such high fees, a problem is bound to happen sooner or later.
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TestnetScholar
· 12-16 09:54
I've been tired of the divergence between price and volume for a long time. Every time, they say a liquidation is coming, but it always pulls through. Who can be sure this time will be different?
If the big players are offloading, then just let them. Anyway, retail investors can't make much profit, so it's better to wait until it drops and then buy in.
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digital_archaeologist
· 12-16 09:53
Be really cautious about the divergence between volume and price. It seems like the main force is slowly cutting leeks in this RIVER move.
I didn't catch up again. If I had known earlier, I would have been more active in long and short positions.
With such high fees, a liquidation would be really disastrous. Maybe wait until the support breaks before considering exiting.
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StakeOrRegret
· 12-16 09:51
I've been tired of the divergence between price and volume for a long time. Every time I say there's a liquidation risk, it still keeps rising. The main force is really good at messing around.
Bearish is bearish, but the resilience of this coin is truly outrageous. I just want to see who will give in first.
With such high fees, daring to pile up longs, it's not just about having money—it's really gambling.
How many times has this support line been broken? The next time it breaks, that's when it’s worth paying attention to.
Honestly, right now, the mentality of shorting is more important than even predicting the right direction. Don’t blame the market if you get liquidated.
#大户持仓变化 $RIVER's recent rapid rally reveals hidden risks — although the price surged high, the trading volume didn't keep up, which is a typical divergence between price and volume. Looking at the high level, although there is increasing volume, the stock price remains stuck, often indicating that the main force is gradually offloading. Additionally, on the futures market side, long positions are quite full, and the funding rate is also at a relatively high level. Once the key support line is broken, it could very likely trigger a domino effect of liquidations. From a risk-reward perspective, the probability and magnitude of a downward trend are more worth paying attention to. In the market, to make money, you need to follow the right direction and clearly understand what the main force is doing — it’s much more reliable than blindly following the crowd.