Looking at PIPP dropping to 0.34, there are still people sitting firmly on the fishing platform, which is quite interesting behind the logic. Either they sold the coins long ago and are pretending to be calm; or they are betting on a rebound. If we look at the opening price, as long as the coin price returns to the cost line, the paper profit is quite satisfying, and the loss is just the small fee—this calculation is worth it no matter how you look at it.



From this perspective, the short-term collapse probability of PIPP is actually not high. Anyone with some chips in hand has a reason to wait and see. Of course, there is also a possibility—backed by a whale behind the holder, deliberately maintaining the atmosphere. But this situation is not very likely, after all, the active number of people in the market is limited.

A more realistic problem is that liquidity is almost exhausted. This is a common issue for many small coins—once the hype fades, funds tend to disperse. Many traders are now turning their attention to other coins, and PIPP is becoming increasingly quiet. To some extent, only places with hype have money; coins without popularity are doomed to be marginalized. The market rotation effect is vividly demonstrated here.
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UncleWhalevip
· 01-05 06:23
To be honest, I'm already tired of the PIPP thing; liquidity exhaustion is the real killer move. Waiting for a rebound? Haha, the problem is no one is trading. Most of what’s held is either because the cost basis is too low to let go or genuine gamblers going all-in. The current market is just a vicious cycle—no hype, funds leave, and with funds gone, no hype either. It’s the fate of small coins. However, at this price of 0.34, there's really no point in dumping anymore since no one is taking orders.
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WagmiWarriorvip
· 01-05 04:49
0.34 can hold steady, either exit early or bet on the bottom rebound. Anyway, once the cost line comes back, it's a blood profit, and transaction fees are not a big deal. The real problem is the liquidity drying up. Without popularity, the coin becomes worthless. This cycle of momentum is a vicious circle.
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LightningWalletvip
· 01-05 04:49
0.34 is still a price level to hold onto tightly; anyway, not much loss left, so let's gamble on a rebound.
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OnlyOnMainnetvip
· 01-05 04:45
0.34 Can anyone remain calm? Either sell early to pretend to be calm, or bet on a rebound. Good psychological preparation. Once liquidity is gone, it's truly the end.
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NFTPessimistvip
· 01-05 04:32
Is that all? Liquidity exhaustion should have been run away from long ago, why are you still calculating accounts there? --- Basically, it's capital rotation. When the hype dies down, the coin naturally cools off. That's the rule. --- I just want to know if the people still坚持ing are true believers or just caught in a trap. --- If you can't get back to the cost line, it's a loss. Don't deceive yourself. --- It's the fate of small coins. After a burst of hype, they become trash. I've seen it too many times. --- The shadow of the whales? Brother, you're overthinking it. There aren't that many whales; no one is playing anymore. --- Exhaustion is what it is, but someone has to bet on the rebound. Who dares now?
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FundingMartyrvip
· 01-05 04:25
Basically, it's a dead coin. When liquidity dries up, it just disperses—this is the fate of small-cap coins... --- Sitting comfortably at the fishing platform? I think you're numb from being trapped. Waiting for a rebound is better than waiting for the next life. --- This is the gambler's mentality. The cost line becomes a psychological barrier, but the problem is no one is willing to take over the position. --- When the hype fades, funds run away. Poor those still waiting for a rebound; PIPP has long become trash. --- Holding chips = being deeply trapped. If it's not a sufficient reason, then there's no choice. --- Another routine of liquidity exhaustion—small coins die this way. --- Popularity is the key. Coins without hype are destined to be neglected. The rotation effect is brutal. --- Instead of waiting for a rebound, it's better to accept losses and cut losses. Holding onto PIPP is just gambling on luck. --- Everyone's numb and pretending to be calm. Why bother... --- Cost line? Probably won't be able to get back. This is called a deep trap.
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