Classic trader wisdom that still rings true: ride the speculation wave when rumors hit, then bail before the official announcement drops. Seen it play out countless times—price pumps on anticipation, dumps when the news actually breaks. Timing that exit is where the real money's made.
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TaxEvader
· 12-13 20:53
Rumor-mongering and hype tricks are still being used? Why do I feel it's getting harder and harder to play?
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 12-13 12:44
Rumor-mongering and hype are truly old tricks that never fail, but I have to say, most people just can't grasp that selling point...
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UnluckyValidator
· 12-12 11:26
I'm too familiar with this trick; it's a typical method of cutting leeks. I'm just afraid I might end up being the one getting cut.
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TokenDustCollector
· 12-11 07:54
The rumor-mongering tactics have been played out for a long time; the real way to make money is still through information asymmetry, but the risks are also extremely high.
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FalseProfitProphet
· 12-11 07:53
Buy when rumors start, sell when news hits the ground. It's easy to say, but really hard to do. I always step one step behind.
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BoredRiceBall
· 12-11 07:52
It sounds simple, but few can come out alive in practice. I have seen too many people die on the sentence "the official has not yet issued an announcement".
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MevWhisperer
· 12-11 07:50
Rumor-mongering and the old tricks of hype, people still believe it? As soon as the news breaks, it causes a crash. Playing this game really just depends on luck.
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RugResistant
· 12-11 07:35
Rumor hype always ends up cutting leeks; I still prefer to focus on the fundamentals. News can be easily manipulated.
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PoolJumper
· 12-11 07:27
Rumors to pump the market, news to dump it—these tricks are old and still being used. Do they really think retail investors are fools?
Classic trader wisdom that still rings true: ride the speculation wave when rumors hit, then bail before the official announcement drops. Seen it play out countless times—price pumps on anticipation, dumps when the news actually breaks. Timing that exit is where the real money's made.