Looking at the recent performance of Bitcoin and Ethereum, there's always a feeling of being arranged. Large funds seem to have grasped some information in advance and have already laid out their plans before taking action.
In a liquidity-tight market, placing such large orders will eat up a significant portion of trading costs—the cost of slippage is not small. What does this indicate? It shows that they are very confident, which is why they dare to do this.
So what should retail investors do? Just hold on. Looking back over the past year, precious metals, US stocks, and A-shares have all gone through cycles. Now, only the crypto space hasn't been fully炒作 (speculated on) yet. Funds always need a place to go, and this round of big capital entering the market is very likely brewing a new boom. Instead of guessing, it's better to wait patiently; holding is the simplest strategy.
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OnchainDetective
· 17h ago
According to on-chain data tracking, the pattern of this wave of orders is indeed interesting—big wallet behaviors have already been locked in, clearly not random moves. Are they willing to absorb slippage costs? The certainty behind this is quite extraordinary.
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SelfCustodyIssues
· 17h ago
Big players are acting so aggressively, which shows they are truly confident. What are we still hesitating about?
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ContractFreelancer
· 17h ago
To be honest, this move is a bit obvious. The big players finished their meal long ago, and only then did we enter the market.
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FrogInTheWell
· 17h ago
That's not right. Is it really highly certain to place such a large order? It could just be a test to probe the market.
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GateUser-74b10196
· 17h ago
Oh my, this logic is a bit far-fetched. A large slippage means high certainty? So if I randomly place a big order, can I also be sure of a surge?
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CounterIndicator
· 17h ago
Uh... I really haven't heard of this logic before. Does a big investor placing a large order mean high certainty? Then what's the deal with the orders I got liquidated on a few days ago, haha?
Looking at the recent performance of Bitcoin and Ethereum, there's always a feeling of being arranged. Large funds seem to have grasped some information in advance and have already laid out their plans before taking action.
In a liquidity-tight market, placing such large orders will eat up a significant portion of trading costs—the cost of slippage is not small. What does this indicate? It shows that they are very confident, which is why they dare to do this.
So what should retail investors do? Just hold on. Looking back over the past year, precious metals, US stocks, and A-shares have all gone through cycles. Now, only the crypto space hasn't been fully炒作 (speculated on) yet. Funds always need a place to go, and this round of big capital entering the market is very likely brewing a new boom. Instead of guessing, it's better to wait patiently; holding is the simplest strategy.