It looks like a bottom has been reached, but in reality, the main players have already started to exit in batches. Pump → Dump → Quiet retreat, this is the standard operation process. Most of the current participants are retail investors celebrating wildly. On a certain leading exchange, over 60% of retail investors are still adding to their longs, but they haven't considered one question: if the main players have already sold out, who is left holding the bag?
From a technical perspective, it also looks good, with the price staying above the moving average, but this could just be a fragile shell. The rebound after the main players retreat is often the easiest to deceive.
From a trading standpoint, there's a strategy worth paying attention to. When the price returns to the $0.0630-$0.0650 range, a short opportunity is at hand. Stop-loss can be set above $0.0660 to give the rebound some breathing room. The downside target is $0.0575; if broken, $0.0550 is a further bearish level.
That's how the market works—logic is often much more important than luck.
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LittleWave2
· 1h ago
Charge
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JustHereForAirdrops
· 5h ago
The main players are playing this trick again, and retail investors really believe in the technical analysis, huh?
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LiquidityWhisperer
· 5h ago
Here comes another scam to trap retail investors, this trick is so old.
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staking_gramps
· 5h ago
It's the same old story, big players run away and retail investors buy the dip. I've heard it too many times.
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Honestly, if it really breaks 0.055 this time, I might believe it.
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Ha, 60% retail investors are bullish? Then I’ll bet against it.
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What’s so great about technical analysis? Still get cut.
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Who’s the one taking the dip? Isn’t it just the next wave of retail investors?
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If the logic was solid, why bother with technical analysis? I’d be financially free by now.
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If the price returns to 0.063, I’ll consider shorting, but I bet it rebounds to 0.08.
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The most deceptive thing is when big players withdraw; this is said every bull market cycle.
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Wait, how do you know over 60% are bullish? Are exchange data reliable?
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I really give up. These kinds of analysis articles come out every week, and what’s the result?
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Cannot hold 0.055, a rebound is just a meat grinder.
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GasWaster
· 5h ago
Here comes the same old trick to harvest the little guys again, this time it's NIGHT's turn.
#加密生态动态追踪 $NIGHT this rebound may not be what you think.
It looks like a bottom has been reached, but in reality, the main players have already started to exit in batches. Pump → Dump → Quiet retreat, this is the standard operation process. Most of the current participants are retail investors celebrating wildly. On a certain leading exchange, over 60% of retail investors are still adding to their longs, but they haven't considered one question: if the main players have already sold out, who is left holding the bag?
From a technical perspective, it also looks good, with the price staying above the moving average, but this could just be a fragile shell. The rebound after the main players retreat is often the easiest to deceive.
From a trading standpoint, there's a strategy worth paying attention to. When the price returns to the $0.0630-$0.0650 range, a short opportunity is at hand. Stop-loss can be set above $0.0660 to give the rebound some breathing room. The downside target is $0.0575; if broken, $0.0550 is a further bearish level.
That's how the market works—logic is often much more important than luck.