The game in the exchange is really interesting—large foreign funds collaborating to layout, targeting the positions where domestic retail investors cluster. On one hand, it's institutional-level organized attacks; on the other hand, it's scattered funds' sniping and defense. The logic of market participants' confrontation is becoming more and more obvious: whoever controls information and funds will have the upper hand in this situation. Sometimes watching the market feels like witnessing an invisible war—big fish eat small fish, and the ongoing fund battles in active exchanges always follow this script.
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HashRateHermit
· 10h ago
Isn't this just the process of getting liquidated? Retail investors can't compete with institutions.
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AirdropHunterXiao
· 01-14 07:50
Retail investors have become prey again. This script has been played for years and still hasn't gotten old.
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FloorPriceNightmare
· 01-14 00:27
Retail investors got cut again, no wonder they always lose.
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DeFi_Dad_Jokes
· 01-14 00:21
It's the same old trick again. How can anyone still believe they can win?
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FromMinerToFarmer
· 01-14 00:17
It's the same old trick again; retail investors really think of themselves as players.
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SigmaValidator
· 01-14 00:17
Retail investors are still struggling with technical analysis, while big players have already started accumulating chips. Wake up, everyone.
The game in the exchange is really interesting—large foreign funds collaborating to layout, targeting the positions where domestic retail investors cluster. On one hand, it's institutional-level organized attacks; on the other hand, it's scattered funds' sniping and defense. The logic of market participants' confrontation is becoming more and more obvious: whoever controls information and funds will have the upper hand in this situation. Sometimes watching the market feels like witnessing an invisible war—big fish eat small fish, and the ongoing fund battles in active exchanges always follow this script.