The harder you pull, the more alert you must be. In the crypto market, many people fall into the feeling of “buying is falling, selling is flying.” The reason is not necessarily due to bad luck, but often because they inadvertently become the “support” for large capital flows at the peak. This article helps you identify two common signals when the main players are quietly withdrawing, along with ways to respond to reduce risks.
Context: When a Peak Is Created During Excitement
Market history shows that large distribution phases often occur during periods when prices seem very strong. In previous Bitcoin peak cycles, a large amount of coins from long-term investors was sold aggressively right as prices continued to hit new highs. In other words, the selling pressure does not come from “account burnouts” due to leverage, but from large capital flows actively taking profits. This is when retail investors are most likely to be swept up in excitement and rush to buy.
Signal 1: Strong Pull at High Levels with Large Liquidity and Volatile Fluctuations
To exit holdings, the main players need buyers. The quickest way to attract buyers is to create the impression that “the market is very healthy.”
You will often see:
Prices are strongly pushed up at high levels, accompanied by a surge in trading volume. Or opening with a sharp increase then fluctuating within a wide range during the day.
On the surface, this appears to be a strong upward trend. But in reality, it could be a distribution process.
Common tactics:
Pushing the price higher to sell some holdings. Then pushing down, and pulling up again to create the feeling that “the price is very stubborn, not willing to fall.” Repeating this cycle several times to get investors used to the oscillation and believe that “each correction is an opportunity to buy more.”
During this process, holdings gradually shift from the main players to the crowd.
Warning signs:
Prices rise but do not go far, repeatedly sold back down. Large volume but narrowing profit margins. Several candles with long wicks, showing fierce struggle.
Signal 2: The Peak Looks “Too Strong” Compared to Market Logic
Many wonder: if the main players are selling, why can prices still keep hitting new highs?
The answer is very simple: to sell at high prices, the order book must look very healthy. If the market is panicking, there will be more sellers than buyers, and the main players cannot unload at their desired prices.
Therefore, you will see signs such as:
Prices are pushed down but immediately pulled back up. After a few oscillations, prices unexpectedly surpass previous highs. Technical indicators show divergence, but prices stubbornly refuse to decline.
At key price levels, order books often show:
Large buy orders creating a strong support impression. Thick sell orders hanging above but with few matches, making investors believe that “demand is overwhelming.”
This is how the main players keep the market sentiment positive enough to continue distributing their holdings.
Response Strategies: What to Do When Suspecting Main Players Are Exiting?
Observe Price-Volume Relationship
A healthy upward trend usually accompanies gradually increasing volume.
Conversely, the following conditions require special caution:
Rising prices but weakening volume. Explosive volume at the peak but prices do not go far.
This often indicates that the buying power is no longer strong enough.
Monitor Large Capital Flows
Institutional and large fund flows reflect the “risk appetite” of the market. When capital continuously withdraws while prices remain high, it’s highly likely that a distribution phase is underway.
Manage Positions and Leverage
In sensitive price zones:
Reduce holdings. Avoid using high leverage. Do not “all-in” based on emotions.
The primary goal is capital preservation, not maximizing profits in the last few candles.
Maintain Independent Thinking
When social media is flooded with good news, buy-in calls, and stories of quick wealth, you need to be especially cautious. Many “good news” stories appear just when the market needs more buyers for the main players to exit.
Conclusion
In the crypto market, the game between large capital flows and retail investors always exists. At the peak, the show is often the most glamorous: strong prices, abundant good news, full of expectations.
But at that very moment, risks are also the highest.
Two important signals you need to remember:
Strong pull at high levels with large liquidity and volatile fluctuations. A peak that looks “too strong” compared to normal market logic.
Just staying calm and disciplined can help you avoid most of the risks of becoming the “support” in the late cycle phase.
In crypto, survival is always more important than quick profits. As long as you have capital, you have opportunities. Once you lose your capital, all opportunities become stories of the past.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
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JerryD
· 8h ago
Excellent post. You are so right that there is a lot of manipulation .. In addition the exchanges themselves (I believe) have their fingers on the scales, in many ways, shaving off excess profits in every scenario. The entire system is somewhat dishonest, and we are "playing against the house" in this casino. The herd get scalped all the time.
Leading Exit at the Top? Two "Pullback" Signals Investors Need to Recognize
The harder you pull, the more alert you must be. In the crypto market, many people fall into the feeling of “buying is falling, selling is flying.” The reason is not necessarily due to bad luck, but often because they inadvertently become the “support” for large capital flows at the peak. This article helps you identify two common signals when the main players are quietly withdrawing, along with ways to respond to reduce risks. Context: When a Peak Is Created During Excitement Market history shows that large distribution phases often occur during periods when prices seem very strong. In previous Bitcoin peak cycles, a large amount of coins from long-term investors was sold aggressively right as prices continued to hit new highs. In other words, the selling pressure does not come from “account burnouts” due to leverage, but from large capital flows actively taking profits. This is when retail investors are most likely to be swept up in excitement and rush to buy. Signal 1: Strong Pull at High Levels with Large Liquidity and Volatile Fluctuations To exit holdings, the main players need buyers. The quickest way to attract buyers is to create the impression that “the market is very healthy.” You will often see: Prices are strongly pushed up at high levels, accompanied by a surge in trading volume. Or opening with a sharp increase then fluctuating within a wide range during the day. On the surface, this appears to be a strong upward trend. But in reality, it could be a distribution process. Common tactics: Pushing the price higher to sell some holdings. Then pushing down, and pulling up again to create the feeling that “the price is very stubborn, not willing to fall.” Repeating this cycle several times to get investors used to the oscillation and believe that “each correction is an opportunity to buy more.” During this process, holdings gradually shift from the main players to the crowd. Warning signs: Prices rise but do not go far, repeatedly sold back down. Large volume but narrowing profit margins. Several candles with long wicks, showing fierce struggle. Signal 2: The Peak Looks “Too Strong” Compared to Market Logic Many wonder: if the main players are selling, why can prices still keep hitting new highs? The answer is very simple: to sell at high prices, the order book must look very healthy. If the market is panicking, there will be more sellers than buyers, and the main players cannot unload at their desired prices. Therefore, you will see signs such as: Prices are pushed down but immediately pulled back up. After a few oscillations, prices unexpectedly surpass previous highs. Technical indicators show divergence, but prices stubbornly refuse to decline. At key price levels, order books often show: Large buy orders creating a strong support impression. Thick sell orders hanging above but with few matches, making investors believe that “demand is overwhelming.” This is how the main players keep the market sentiment positive enough to continue distributing their holdings. Response Strategies: What to Do When Suspecting Main Players Are Exiting?