Have you noticed this vicious cycle — always standing on the opposite side of the market trend? When the bullish momentum is strong, you have no coins; but when it really drops, you go all in with full positions.
Honestly, the current market is no longer a game of technical analysis. The old routine of retail investors chasing rallies and selling off on dips is always playing out, while the big players keep countering. The bottom you think you see? It might just be their shakeout station. The peak you think you recognize? It’s just their refueling station for accumulating more.
The most ironic thing is those guys who shout about buying the dip in Bitcoin all day long. When the price hits their psychological level, they start to hesitate about whether to buy in. That’s the market’s routine: first giving you some sweet moments to keep your hope alive, then suddenly dropping sharply. Rinse and repeat. Many people have probably experienced this psychological torment.
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BearMarketMonk
· 11h ago
Haha, that hurts so much. I'm the kind of person who shouts until the sky breaks, but when I really fall, I get scared.
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CryptoNomics
· 11h ago
actually if you ran a basic correlation matrix on retail FOMO cycles vs whale accumulation patterns, you'd see this is just market inefficiency 101. the psychological warfare you're describing? that's literally just information asymmetry priced in.
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rekt_but_resilient
· 11h ago
That's right, it's always like this getting cut... When I have coins, I want the price to fall, but once it drops, I run out of money.
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MemeEchoer
· 11h ago
Uh... Isn't this the true portrayal of me every time, staring at the side when I watched the rise, I rushed in as soon as I fell, and then I was trapped, which was quite ruthless.
Have you noticed this vicious cycle — always standing on the opposite side of the market trend? When the bullish momentum is strong, you have no coins; but when it really drops, you go all in with full positions.
Honestly, the current market is no longer a game of technical analysis. The old routine of retail investors chasing rallies and selling off on dips is always playing out, while the big players keep countering. The bottom you think you see? It might just be their shakeout station. The peak you think you recognize? It’s just their refueling station for accumulating more.
The most ironic thing is those guys who shout about buying the dip in Bitcoin all day long. When the price hits their psychological level, they start to hesitate about whether to buy in. That’s the market’s routine: first giving you some sweet moments to keep your hope alive, then suddenly dropping sharply. Rinse and repeat. Many people have probably experienced this psychological torment.