Yesterday's morning plunge was quite fierce, and the bulls were wiped out instantly. In recent days, money has been continuously flowing out of the market, and the rate of new capital inflow simply can't keep up with the pace of sell-offs.
After a day of volatility yesterday, today's trading volume continues to shrink, indicating a clear decline in participation. Fewer and fewer participants, but this actually gives the big players an opportunity—quietly accumulating shares during the lull.
In this environment, you have to tough it out. If you survive this painful phase, when the real surge comes, make sure to sit tight and hold on firmly—don't exit easily.
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SwapWhisperer
· 4h ago
Coming back with this again? Basically, the big players are shaking out the weak hands, retail investors should just cut their losses and sell.
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GasOptimizer
· 4h ago
The trading volume has shrunk to this extent, and the ratio of capital outflow speed to new inflow speed is already negative. This is not a matter of endurance; the data is speaking.
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ForkMonger
· 4h ago
volume's drying up faster than governance legitimacy in a broken protocol... classic accumulation setup or just exit liquidity? ngl, the weak hands getting shaken out is kinda the point here.
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GasFeeTherapist
· 4h ago
This round of dumping is truly outrageous, the bulls are dying off really quickly.
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With such poor trading volume, the big players are quietly accumulating at the bottom.
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Those who can't hold on have already cut their losses, the rest is just a matter of who can stay put.
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Is a quiet market actually a good thing? Feels like I've heard this set of words many times before.
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New funds simply can't come in, everyone in the organization is just waiting.
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When will the real surge happen? Just shouting to stay steady is useless.
Yesterday's morning plunge was quite fierce, and the bulls were wiped out instantly. In recent days, money has been continuously flowing out of the market, and the rate of new capital inflow simply can't keep up with the pace of sell-offs.
After a day of volatility yesterday, today's trading volume continues to shrink, indicating a clear decline in participation. Fewer and fewer participants, but this actually gives the big players an opportunity—quietly accumulating shares during the lull.
In this environment, you have to tough it out. If you survive this painful phase, when the real surge comes, make sure to sit tight and hold on firmly—don't exit easily.