Recently, market hotspot funds have clearly concentrated on a few cryptocurrencies, with retail and institutional investors showing relatively consistent activity directions. This phenomenon often indicates a phase of capital concentration. When this wave of funds begins to overflow, it usually flows into other undervalued targets. From a trading perspective, if large investors have sufficient funds to support and a strong willingness to buy, certain cryptocurrencies theoretically have considerable room for growth—conservatively estimated to reach the range of 0.035 to 0.06. However, in reality, some major players either lack sufficient ammunition or temporarily lack the motivation to push prices higher, leading to a somewhat calm market. This stalemate may last for a period until there is a significant change in the capital flow or a new market catalyst appears. For traders, this period tests patience and sensitivity to capital movement.
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LiquidityWitch
· 7h ago
Damn, this wave of funds has really concentrated into a ball, feels like everyone is just waiting for someone to make the first move.
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No bullets from the market maker? Then we retail investors are even more helpless haha.
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0.035 to 0.06? Looks like a big pie in the sky, let's wait and see.
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Patience? Bro, I've lost all my patience. Watching the market every day is depressing.
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Funds overflowing into undervalued assets? The problem is, who can know in advance when the overflow will happen?
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This stalemate feels more torturous than a decline.
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Waiting for a catalyst again, it always feels like catalysts are harder to wait for than good news.
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It's true that big players lack ammunition; they've taken out quite a few people before.
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Sense of acuity? My acuity? It was smashed away when the order was hit directly.
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Boring consolidation is the most annoying; I'd rather just have a quick drop and get it over with.
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ImpermanentPhilosopher
· 01-10 19:54
It's the old trick of funds banding together again. Retail investors follow the trend, big players follow institutions, and in the end, it's still the same people cutting the same people. 0.035 to 0.06? Just listen. When the big players have no ammunition, everything is just talk on paper.
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LeverageAddict
· 01-10 19:54
If the big players have no bullets, don't come. Stop messing with this illusion. I'm just waiting for the moment when the funds overflow.
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GasBankrupter
· 01-10 19:52
The market maker has no motivation, let's wait and see. I feel like we need to hold on a bit longer.
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HorizonHunter
· 01-10 19:52
Without ammunition, the market maker can't push it up, which is the current awkward situation. We still have to wait for new catalysts to come down.
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SerLiquidated
· 01-10 19:41
Damn it, it's the same old story. Does capital concentration really make it go up? Why am I still cutting losses?
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just_another_wallet
· 01-10 19:40
The market maker has no ammunition, so stop bragging. You're just as panicked as retail investors.
Recently, market hotspot funds have clearly concentrated on a few cryptocurrencies, with retail and institutional investors showing relatively consistent activity directions. This phenomenon often indicates a phase of capital concentration. When this wave of funds begins to overflow, it usually flows into other undervalued targets. From a trading perspective, if large investors have sufficient funds to support and a strong willingness to buy, certain cryptocurrencies theoretically have considerable room for growth—conservatively estimated to reach the range of 0.035 to 0.06. However, in reality, some major players either lack sufficient ammunition or temporarily lack the motivation to push prices higher, leading to a somewhat calm market. This stalemate may last for a period until there is a significant change in the capital flow or a new market catalyst appears. For traders, this period tests patience and sensitivity to capital movement.