This phenomenon is indeed worth pondering. A certain project team started repurchasing during the season, and now they have launched a strategic reserve buyback. The buying momentum has continued to increase, but the price has become increasingly difficult to buy up, showing a downward trend instead.
An interesting question has emerged—since both the official team and major shareholders are continuously building positions, who is actually continuously dumping? Is it collective market pessimism? Or are there other big players operating in reverse? Or perhaps the buyback promise itself has caused market doubts, worrying that there is a reason behind every event?
From a technical perspective, buybacks are usually seen as a bullish signal, but this logic seems to fail here. The phenomenon of buying unable to support the price may hide some deep-seated market expectation discrepancies.
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ForumMiningMaster
· 12h ago
The price remains unchanged for buyback, this is just outrageous.
Who is really dumping the market? It's a bit suspicious.
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GateUser-a5fa8bd0
· 12h ago
The aggressive buyback and sell-off actually accelerate the decline, truly can't hold on anymore.
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TommyTeacher
· 12h ago
The tactic of buyback and smashing the market, I've seen it many times before. Are they pulling this stunt again?
The ones smashing the market definitely aren't the official team. That means retail investors have already fled, and only the bagholders are left.
There is always a reason behind every incident, and this phrase hits the nail on the head.
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NFT_Therapy_Group
· 12h ago
The more aggressive the buyback, the more intense the smash. I've seen this plot too many times, haha.
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GhostWalletSleuth
· 12h ago
Buyback crashing the market, a classic reverse indicator
The officials are buying while we are selling, that's outrageous
Really can't buy... what does that mean
There must be something they're hiding from us
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FortuneTeller42
· 12h ago
Buybacks can't push the price down, which is even more frightening
This shows that the selling pressure is much stronger than the official's hand...
The more the official buys, the more it drops, thinking about it carefully is terrifying
This phenomenon is indeed worth pondering. A certain project team started repurchasing during the season, and now they have launched a strategic reserve buyback. The buying momentum has continued to increase, but the price has become increasingly difficult to buy up, showing a downward trend instead.
An interesting question has emerged—since both the official team and major shareholders are continuously building positions, who is actually continuously dumping? Is it collective market pessimism? Or are there other big players operating in reverse? Or perhaps the buyback promise itself has caused market doubts, worrying that there is a reason behind every event?
From a technical perspective, buybacks are usually seen as a bullish signal, but this logic seems to fail here. The phenomenon of buying unable to support the price may hide some deep-seated market expectation discrepancies.