The market always differentiates at such moments. Retail investors gradually exit, and stop-loss orders keep flooding out. Meanwhile, the true players are entering at this point, quietly accumulating.
This is the norm in the crypto market—when emotions hit the freezing point, funds are flowing quietly in the background. Panic sell-offs are absorbed, and the chips gradually settle into the hands of the patient.
History always repeats itself. Every cycle of such transitions becomes the starting point for the next wave of market trends. The key question is, which side are you on?
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WinterWarmthCat
· 01-07 11:26
It's the same story again, every time it drops, they say someone is accumulating, but I haven't seen it.
Wait, am I the retail investor getting cut again?
This time really is different... right?
That's right, I just don't have the money to stand on the right side.
History repeating itself? No way, this time it's really going to drop to nothing.
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HodlOrRegret
· 01-05 21:56
Here we go again with the same old script: retail investors get squeezed out, big players accumulate. The question is, how do you know you're not the chip being absorbed?
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DeFiDoctor
· 01-05 21:52
Medical records show that it is once again the peak period for retail investors to experience large capital outflows. The question is, can on-chain data prove that this wave of "accumulation" truly occurred?
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Stop with this narrative. The clinical signs look very familiar, but liquidity indicators tell me a different story.
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Every time they say "the real players are entering," can they identify the specific wallet addresses? Otherwise, it's just another collective illusion.
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The symptoms of capital outflow do exist, but the key is where it is heading—are large investors really taking over, or are funds flowing into some high-risk protocols?
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In plain terms, it's just an advanced form of gambling. History repeats itself, and new pitfalls on the chain keep emerging one after another.
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I've heard this kind of divisive argument too many times. I suggest regularly reviewing the actual returns of your accounts and not being seduced by the illusion of "the next market wave."
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ForkMaster
· 01-05 21:36
Uh... it's the same old story. I earn my three kids' milk money this way, and real opportunities are never revealed through writing articles.
The market always differentiates at such moments. Retail investors gradually exit, and stop-loss orders keep flooding out. Meanwhile, the true players are entering at this point, quietly accumulating.
This is the norm in the crypto market—when emotions hit the freezing point, funds are flowing quietly in the background. Panic sell-offs are absorbed, and the chips gradually settle into the hands of the patient.
History always repeats itself. Every cycle of such transitions becomes the starting point for the next wave of market trends. The key question is, which side are you on?