#美联储降息 The market manipulator game in the crypto world may seem complicated, but it's actually just that simple.
What’s different from traditional finance? 24/7 nonstop trading, leverage freely stacked, complete information asymmetry, regulation virtually nonexistent, retail investors' emotions on a rollercoaster—when these conditions stack together, the manipulator’s operations become crazy, covert, and even more bottom-line driven.
So what are they really thinking? The core logic boils down to these points (ranked from most to least important):
**First: Cash flow is the boss, the coin price is just a smokescreen**
Don’t be fooled by manipulators constantly hyping a project. In reality, what they care about most isn’t how high the coin can go, but—how many bullets they still have to fire.
Why pump the coin? Not because they truly believe in it, but to offload their holdings. Simple and crude.
The algorithm is straightforward: Money spent on pumping < Profits from dumping + the chips bought back at lower prices afterward. If the math adds up, they do it.
Look at those coins that suddenly surge then plummet—this is the story behind it.
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liquidation_surfer
· 12h ago
Haha, really, it's always the same trick: pump the price, dump at low levels to buy back, retail investors are just here to give away money.
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FOMOmonster
· 12-11 08:07
Haha really, it's always the same trick—pumping the price to offload and accumulate chips, while retail investors happily buy in.
I just watch and wait for the day the bankroll of the big players runs out.
They're talking about cash flow being the parent, so true—crypto prices are just smoke and mirrors.
Cutting interest rates again, but who's cutting whom, really?
Basically, it's a 24-hour meat grinder, with no night trading halt for protection.
I've seen through this logic long ago; knowing it doesn't change anything, I still have to play.
The money spent to pump the price is less than the profit made from selling, so the equation always holds, and retail investors are always the denominator.
Every time there's a big surge, I want to run, but I always end up running late—I'm really bad at this.
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StableNomad
· 12-11 08:05
ngl this is just pump & dump with extra steps, the math checks out statistically speaking but everyone acts shocked when it happens... reminds me of UST in May except slower 💀
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BearMarketBarber
· 12-11 08:00
Cash flow is king—that's a brilliant saying. Retail investors are just here to pay tuition to the big players.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 12-11 07:59
Another article about the tricks of the market makers, but to be honest, this stuff has long lost its novelty, and those who are truly making money have already jumped on board.
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SnapshotLaborer
· 12-11 07:58
It's the same pattern again: buy low, manipulate the market to attract funds, sell high. Retail investors are just here to be the stepping stones, huh?
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EthSandwichHero
· 12-11 07:56
It's just a game of passing the parcel; retail investors are always the ones holding the bag last. Wake up, everyone.
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just_another_wallet
· 12-11 07:52
Damn, I've seen through this trick long ago. It's just a cash flow game; the coin price is really just a cover... Retail investors are still following the trend and buying in.
#美联储降息 The market manipulator game in the crypto world may seem complicated, but it's actually just that simple.
What’s different from traditional finance? 24/7 nonstop trading, leverage freely stacked, complete information asymmetry, regulation virtually nonexistent, retail investors' emotions on a rollercoaster—when these conditions stack together, the manipulator’s operations become crazy, covert, and even more bottom-line driven.
So what are they really thinking? The core logic boils down to these points (ranked from most to least important):
**First: Cash flow is the boss, the coin price is just a smokescreen**
Don’t be fooled by manipulators constantly hyping a project. In reality, what they care about most isn’t how high the coin can go, but—how many bullets they still have to fire.
Why pump the coin? Not because they truly believe in it, but to offload their holdings. Simple and crude.
The algorithm is straightforward: Money spent on pumping < Profits from dumping + the chips bought back at lower prices afterward. If the math adds up, they do it.
Look at those coins that suddenly surge then plummet—this is the story behind it.