My recent trading experience with a certain cryptocurrency has made me reevaluate the tactics of the main players.
After entering at the price of 0.0293740, I was immediately trapped, and the initial margin of 10,000 U was shrinking. Carefully observing the market, I found that this was not just a simple decline—it was a typical trap to induce buying and then dump. During the volume-contracted downtrend, every rebound was met with resistance, a rhythm that resembles dull knife slicing meat, causing retail investors to keep cutting losses and surrender.
According to past market patterns, the main target should be around the strong liquidation line at 0.02365. That area likely gathers a large number of retail stop-loss orders. Once the price falls below that level, it could trigger a chain of liquidations, allowing the main players to leverage a huge amount of liquidity at very low cost. The volume contraction is actually a buildup of strength; once the timing is right, a rapid decline may occur.
The market is like this—someone’s pain is another’s opportunity. Instead of passively being cut, it’s better to actively recognize this pattern—provided you have risk management awareness and do not blindly chase orders.
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GasWastingMaximalist
· 4h ago
Once again, the main force has perfectly harvested, this is my daily routine every month.
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LiquiditySurfer
· 4h ago
Getting cut again, huh? I see through this manipulation method too. Shrinking volume is just holding back a big move.
By the way, the 0.02365 level is indeed dangerous. Retail investors' stop-loss orders pile up there like bombs, and the main force is just waiting to trigger them.
Risk management is truly the lifeline; many people fail because of this.
The main force is playing psychological warfare—pushing down on rebounds to make you doubt your judgment.
What’s missing is resolve. Even if you understand it, you still need to hold on.
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APY_Chaser
· 4h ago
It's the same old trick of诱多 and killing the rally. Just look at how you're trapped at 0.029... I'm also a victim, and the moment of chain liquidation was truly despairing.
This is how the psychology of the main players works: shrinking volume and repeatedly suppressing is just collecting chips, waiting for the forced liquidation line to explode so retail investors realize what's happening. Risk management sounds easy, but who can really do it?
Having been cut so many times, now I watch the market with conditioned reflexes—wherever there's suppression, I run there.
That line at 0.02365... is already marked. Next time they pull this trick, I'll go short in the opposite direction.
Honestly, it's just the main players cutting the leeks. What can I do? Just accept it.
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SeeYouInFourYears
· 4h ago
The trick of诱多出货 (fake buy-up to sell off) is the same every time, retail investors are just the ones getting cut off.
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MerkleMaid
· 4h ago
Another story of being trapped... The excuse of诱多出货 has long been tired of hearing. The problem is, so what if you know? You're still getting cut.
My recent trading experience with a certain cryptocurrency has made me reevaluate the tactics of the main players.
After entering at the price of 0.0293740, I was immediately trapped, and the initial margin of 10,000 U was shrinking. Carefully observing the market, I found that this was not just a simple decline—it was a typical trap to induce buying and then dump. During the volume-contracted downtrend, every rebound was met with resistance, a rhythm that resembles dull knife slicing meat, causing retail investors to keep cutting losses and surrender.
According to past market patterns, the main target should be around the strong liquidation line at 0.02365. That area likely gathers a large number of retail stop-loss orders. Once the price falls below that level, it could trigger a chain of liquidations, allowing the main players to leverage a huge amount of liquidity at very low cost. The volume contraction is actually a buildup of strength; once the timing is right, a rapid decline may occur.
The market is like this—someone’s pain is another’s opportunity. Instead of passively being cut, it’s better to actively recognize this pattern—provided you have risk management awareness and do not blindly chase orders.