Recently, the trend of $DOLO has sparked quite a bit of discussion. Some participants have noticed an interesting phenomenon: this coin often follows BTC's market movements to create a false impression of a breakout, attracting retail investors to enter. Once the chips are concentrated enough, it immediately switches to shorting, regardless of how BTC continues to rise, it keeps suppressing the price downward. When retail investors are forced to cut losses and exit, and the chips drop, the price then rises along with the market. This cyclical operation is indeed quite damaging—it neither respects the objective laws of market trends nor follows basic trading fairness principles. From a risk control perspective, this highly controllable price fluctuation often reflects participants' deep control over liquidity and chip distribution. Retail investors in such manipulated environments often become the objects of being harvested.
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HodlKumamon
· 7h ago
Xiong Xiong calculated this wave of manipulation cycle, and the average interval between cutting leeks was 4.8 days, with statistical significance p<0.05呢...散户真的挺苦的
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$DOLO I've seen this routine too many times, to put it bluntly, it's a liquidity black hole, and a small scatter is basically equivalent to delivering food to the dealer
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According to the K-line data of the past 180 days, the survival period of this type of coin usually does not exceed one year, so it is recommended to stay away
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Eh, BTC rises and it reverses the reverse beta operation, Xiong Xiong can see that there are institutions scheduling... Retail investors still want to follow the trend and make money, it's too naïve
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Instead of dwelling on $DOLO, it is better to invest in mainstream currencies, and the Sharpe ratio can be more than twice as high
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This is a typical highly controllable asset, liquidity is deeply low, and decentralization is a decoration for them
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DaisyUnicorn
· 7h ago
It's the same old trick again, little flowers dancing in the opposite direction of BTC... retail investors really should learn to read the chip stories behind the candlestick charts.
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NFTDreamer
· 7h ago
Damn, I've seen this DOLO scheme too many times, it's just a living harvesting machine.
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BlockDetective
· 7h ago
It's the same old trick again, DOLO this coin is basically a textbook example of rug pulling... Doing the opposite of BTC, truly incredible.
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I've seen it coming long ago, those chasing the high are just cannon fodder, waiting to be harvested.
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That's why I never touch small-cap coins, the tricks are too deep...
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Damn, check your own holdings... Am I really stuck in this trap too?
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Liquidity control = manipulators do whatever they want, retail investors are always pawns.
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BTC rises, they dump in the opposite direction, this move is really outrageous, is this how big funds play?
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Typical wash trading, if you don't have enough chips, don't participate in this game.
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It's always like this, people entering at high levels are really miserable, cutting losses to the point of despair.
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Basically, it's information asymmetry + capital suppression, we can't compete with these manipulators.
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Why are there still people daring to chase this stuff... Haven't you paid enough tuition fees?
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zkNoob
· 7h ago
It's the same old story again. DOLO is really a terrible project. Are the manipulators just going to blatantly cut the leeks like this?
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SerNgmi
· 8h ago
Damn, DOLO is really incredible. To be honest, it's just the dealer's cash machine.
I've been cut three times already. The reverse operation pattern with BTC is so disgusting.
I'm deleting this coin directly. I'm not playing anymore.
Recently, the trend of $DOLO has sparked quite a bit of discussion. Some participants have noticed an interesting phenomenon: this coin often follows BTC's market movements to create a false impression of a breakout, attracting retail investors to enter. Once the chips are concentrated enough, it immediately switches to shorting, regardless of how BTC continues to rise, it keeps suppressing the price downward. When retail investors are forced to cut losses and exit, and the chips drop, the price then rises along with the market. This cyclical operation is indeed quite damaging—it neither respects the objective laws of market trends nor follows basic trading fairness principles. From a risk control perspective, this highly controllable price fluctuation often reflects participants' deep control over liquidity and chip distribution. Retail investors in such manipulated environments often become the objects of being harvested.