The characteristics of yēbìng are not all the same.


In the last round, yēbìng finally power’d; as long as you want to buy the dip, there will be an endless amount of bottoms you can’t buy.
This round of yēbìng begins with siren; as long as you dare to short, it dares to rebound and trap you.
You can look at power, myx... how many dip-buyers are trapped at the mountaintop; then look at siren, sto... how many short-chasers are trapped at the low.
They say that the market maker is a flexible profit seeker—this is absolutely true. The way they run trades will change according to the shifts in retail investors’ emotions.
In the past, everyone generally held an expectation of a rebound after a coin sees a violent surge and then a violent drop. The market maker’s response, however, was to keep the coin’s price drifting lower.
After this happens enough times, many people gradually realize that a sharp drop is a signal that the market maker is abandoning the position; in that situation, it only means buying more and falling more.
But when most people form this kind of awareness and put it into practice, and when they chase shorts during the crash, the sly market maker turns the gun around and starts targeting a new consensus.
The market is evolving, and the core of that evolution is to turn the last time-effective experience into the root cause of the next loss.
Maybe when a certain behavior pattern becomes common knowledge for most people, it is the moment it becomes ineffective.
$SIREN $STO #Gate广场四月发帖挑战
SIREN268,93%
STO81,04%
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