#美国贸易赤字状况 Beware of the main players running away right under your nose—often, while you're still foolishly waiting for a rebound, the chips have already changed hands.
How to identify? Focus on two key points.
**First: High volume at high levels but no upward movement.**
Rising prices, gap openings—these are bait to lure retail investors in. But the chips in hand are vast, and they can't be unloaded in a single day. So the main players start playing tricks, shaking the price back and forth at high levels, pushing up then pulling back today, killing then rallying tomorrow, repeatedly messing with retail investors' psychology.
After several rounds of this, some can't hold on anymore and mistakenly think "it won't fall anymore," adding to their positions—just in time for the main players to continue unloading and cut their losses.
**Second: The closer to the top, the more the price action tries to perform.**
With too many chips, unloading is a long-term project. To stabilize the price and maintain retail confidence, the main players hold the price from falling while secretly dumping. The result is—oscillations, new highs, oscillations again, new highs again—appearing strong as hell, but technical indicators show divergence and contradictions.
These indicator anomalies are the true reflection of the main players shedding chips.
Learn these two tricks, and at least you can avoid most of the top traps.
Market opportunities are always there, but the ones who truly make money are those who see through the trend. $SOL $ZEC
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OnlyOnMainnet
· 20h ago
High-volume rally at the top doesn't work anymore. This trick has been fooling me into adding positions every time.
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GasFeeBeggar
· 21h ago
High-volume rally can't move up, I'm f***ed again and caught in a trap.
View OriginalReply0
StopLossMaster
· 21h ago
It's the same pattern again. When there's high volume at the top and no price increase, I'm no longer surprised. The key is to have mental preparation and not get confused by the ups and downs.
View OriginalReply0
MEV_Whisperer
· 21h ago
High-volume rally without movement, I've seen this trick many times. The key is to look at the indicator divergence; don't be fooled by the candlestick chart.
#美国贸易赤字状况 Beware of the main players running away right under your nose—often, while you're still foolishly waiting for a rebound, the chips have already changed hands.
How to identify? Focus on two key points.
**First: High volume at high levels but no upward movement.**
Rising prices, gap openings—these are bait to lure retail investors in. But the chips in hand are vast, and they can't be unloaded in a single day. So the main players start playing tricks, shaking the price back and forth at high levels, pushing up then pulling back today, killing then rallying tomorrow, repeatedly messing with retail investors' psychology.
After several rounds of this, some can't hold on anymore and mistakenly think "it won't fall anymore," adding to their positions—just in time for the main players to continue unloading and cut their losses.
**Second: The closer to the top, the more the price action tries to perform.**
With too many chips, unloading is a long-term project. To stabilize the price and maintain retail confidence, the main players hold the price from falling while secretly dumping. The result is—oscillations, new highs, oscillations again, new highs again—appearing strong as hell, but technical indicators show divergence and contradictions.
These indicator anomalies are the true reflection of the main players shedding chips.
Learn these two tricks, and at least you can avoid most of the top traps.
Market opportunities are always there, but the ones who truly make money are those who see through the trend. $SOL $ZEC