The boss has already pocketed 9 billion this year, and now it’s the executives’ turn—three of them are about to offload a total of 3.35 million shares. The timing couldn’t be more ruthless: the stock price has plummeted from its August high of 29 all the way down, dropping more than 30% over four months, and is now back to where it was in July.
What’s the most disheartening part? Even with the stock price falling this much, you’d think someone would step up to stabilize things, right? Instead, not only is nobody supporting the price, but there’s a line of people waiting to cash out. 1.01 million small and medium shareholders can only watch their accounts bleed red—how could anyone feel good about this?
A professor made a good point—at the end of the day, the solution needs to come from the rules themselves. If there’s never any order to these share reductions, and major shareholders can exit whenever they want while small investors are left helpless, then market confidence is bound to be drained sooner or later.
After all, everyone wants to make some money in the market. But the game needs to be fair—it can’t always be some people eating meat, some drinking soup, and others not even getting a sip. When will this cycle finally be broken?
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RegenRestorer
· 12-09 19:24
This is just outrageous. The executives really dare to take turns fleecing retail investors.
I'm tired of seeing this trick. The stock price has tanked, and they still have to bail out?
When will someone rein these people in so retail investors can finally catch a break?
If the rules don’t change, we’ll always be the ones getting eaten.
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BearMarketHustler
· 12-09 19:17
Here we go again, this playbook is all too familiar: the big players escape, the small ones lose.
With this move from the executives, they might as well have "we're running first" written on their faces.
I really don't get it—when the stock price tanks, they accelerate their exit? Who teaches this logic?
9 billion pocketed, 3.35 million shares handed over... the average dividend must be billions, right? And the small investors? Left in the dust.
Wait, is this the so-called "sharing the journey with shareholders"?
If the rules don't change, it's always going to be like this. Feels like the market is just one big retail investor harvesting machine.
Retail investors need to wake up—this game really isn't for us.
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TokenomicsPolice
· 12-09 19:11
9 billion pocketed, 3.35 million shares picked up—what a cliché script.
Lining up to bail while retail investors just stare—can you still call this a market?
If the rules don’t change, they’re just tools for cutting down retail investors.
Major shareholders walk away with the money, while small investors are still dreaming—heartbreaking.
These rules were made to bully retail investors from the start. Change? Not going to happen.
Same old trick: big shareholders feast while retail investors get scraps. When will it end?
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DataBartender
· 12-09 19:10
Uh... 9 billion still isn't enough, you have to milk another round?
I've smelled this scent way too many times before.
This wave of stock sell-offs is truly unsettling.
The boss has already pocketed 9 billion this year, and now it’s the executives’ turn—three of them are about to offload a total of 3.35 million shares. The timing couldn’t be more ruthless: the stock price has plummeted from its August high of 29 all the way down, dropping more than 30% over four months, and is now back to where it was in July.
What’s the most disheartening part? Even with the stock price falling this much, you’d think someone would step up to stabilize things, right? Instead, not only is nobody supporting the price, but there’s a line of people waiting to cash out. 1.01 million small and medium shareholders can only watch their accounts bleed red—how could anyone feel good about this?
A professor made a good point—at the end of the day, the solution needs to come from the rules themselves. If there’s never any order to these share reductions, and major shareholders can exit whenever they want while small investors are left helpless, then market confidence is bound to be drained sooner or later.
After all, everyone wants to make some money in the market. But the game needs to be fair—it can’t always be some people eating meat, some drinking soup, and others not even getting a sip. When will this cycle finally be broken?