$PIPPIN's recent trend has been quite unpredictable. A major account holds a position of 22 million USD, with floating losses now reaching 1.36 million USD. At the current cost basis, the price needs to be driven to around 2.9 to break even.
Interestingly, this major holder not only has spot holdings but also multiple backdoor positions, plus bots eating liquidity. Probabilistically, it's indeed less likely to be drained completely.
But here's the problem—obviously, the other side wants to do the same as before, relying on fee collection and time to gradually wear down the opponent. If they truly go head-to-head like this, how high are the chances of winning? During periods of repeated market fluctuations, who can really endure until the end? What do you all think about this tug-of-war between the main forces?
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BridgeNomad
· 12-15 13:57
honestly watching this $PIPPIN whale situation reminds me of the old liquidity fragmentation wars... dude's holding $22M with bots eating orderbooks? that's textbook counter-party risk theater. the real question isn't who can outlast who—it's whether those "backup chips" are actually liquid enough when the cascade happens. seen this exact setup implode spectacularly before, not fun.
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AirdropHunter9000
· 12-15 12:00
22 million can't hold up, this game has to be played to the extreme
Waiting out the time is just a trick to fool retail investors; the real main players have already shown their true colors on the chain
If this price is pushed up to 2.9? Probably dreaming, liquidity simply isn't enough
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GateUser-26d7f434
· 12-12 14:46
Oh no, a floating loss of $13,600 on $22 million directly stunned me. How painful is that... It needs to rise to 2.9 to break even, feels pretty hopeless.
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gas_fee_therapy
· 12-12 14:44
2.9? Laughing to death, this big player will have to wait until the Year of the Monkey and the Horse
This confrontation depends on who breaks first emotionally, it's really hard to say
Rely on earning fees? Wake up, liquidity is so poor now, it's all about who has a stronger backbone
The game among the major players, we just watch the show, don't follow the trend and get caught
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MoonBoi42
· 12-12 14:43
A floating loss of 1.36 million dollars, and you still dare to go all-in? That mentality is incredible. But can 2.9 really push it up? It feels uncertain.
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MidnightSeller
· 12-12 14:41
22 million floating loss 1.36 million, who can withstand this, I'm truly convinced
The ones who can last until the end are often those who don't care about time cost. Large traders holding more chips have a significant advantage, but it's really tough
In this tug-of-war, it ultimately comes down to whose funding chain is stronger. The small amount of transaction fees won't kill anyone
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ZenMiner
· 12-12 14:31
1.36 million floating loss, not worried at all. This brother really has confidence. I just want to see if 2.9 can hold.
$PIPPIN's recent trend has been quite unpredictable. A major account holds a position of 22 million USD, with floating losses now reaching 1.36 million USD. At the current cost basis, the price needs to be driven to around 2.9 to break even.
Interestingly, this major holder not only has spot holdings but also multiple backdoor positions, plus bots eating liquidity. Probabilistically, it's indeed less likely to be drained completely.
But here's the problem—obviously, the other side wants to do the same as before, relying on fee collection and time to gradually wear down the opponent. If they truly go head-to-head like this, how high are the chances of winning? During periods of repeated market fluctuations, who can really endure until the end? What do you all think about this tug-of-war between the main forces?