The recent plunge in cryptocurrency prices has been quite outrageous. Want to understand what's really going on? In fact, the underlying logical chain is more complex than you might think.



When U.S. non-farm payroll data falls below expectations, the behavior pattern of global capital immediately changes. At this moment, risk aversion sentiment is instantly triggered, and traditional safe-haven assets like government bonds and the US dollar will attract a large amount of funds. In other words, money originally in high-risk assets (including cryptocurrencies) will continuously flow out. This is a natural market reaction, nothing surprising about it.

Next are the actions of whale players. Whenever uncertainty appears in the market, those holding large positions—institutions or big investors—tend to preemptively sell off large amounts to lock in profits or cut losses. Once this sell-off signal is caught by retail investors, a collective rush to exit follows, creating a typical stampede effect.

Interestingly, traditional safe-haven commodities like silver and gold are also rising, further diverting the already insufficient risk asset allocation funds. Coupled with recent frequent security incidents on exchanges and chains, everyone’s confidence in the ecosystem is also wavering.

Ultimately, the current market is highly leveraged and emotion-driven. When incremental funds stop flowing in, this system built on continuous financing can easily face liquidity crises. Although short-term volatility is high, market adjustments are necessary—they are part of digesting overly optimistic expectations.

For long-term investors with a positive outlook, the main focus at this stage should be risk control and patiently observing the subsequent macro data. After all, markets never rise in a straight line.
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ProxyCollectorvip
· 8h ago
Basically, it's whales dumping and retail investors following suit, then gold and silver buying the dip. We deserve to be cut.
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HodlKumamonvip
· 8h ago
Data speaks. When non-farm payrolls drop, retail investors tend to run. I predicted this stampede effect early on, with a 73.5% probability. It's time for dollar-cost averaging. I’ve invested a small amount during the bullish surge. Volatility is actually an opportunity. Frequent security incidents are really disheartening, but this is when long-term investors start to buy the dip. Short-term fluctuations are large, but the long-term is the real way. Just hold tight and keep your position. Liquidity crises sound scary, but in reality, it’s just the market digesting overly optimistic sentiments, which is very normal. High leverage markets are like this—without new capital inflows, they tend to collapse. This round of adjustment is actually necessary.
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GasFeeLadyvip
· 8h ago
ngl, this is just gwei watching on steroids... when macro data flips, liquidity dries up faster than you can optimize your transaction. classic liquidation cascade tbh.
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DeFiChefvip
· 8h ago
When whales dump, we have to run. This logic has been played out long ago.
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