$BEAT It is obvious that this market maker has a large appetite. If he directly dumps, he can forcefully earn some chips, but what the market maker is thinking is far from that simple. I can only say that the current level is not what the market maker wants. The U-shaped candlestick repeatedly wears down the short positions' sentiment. By the time the real plummet happens, the short positions' sentiment has already been worn down quite a bit, and everyone is hesitant to get on board, which is when he dumps. Another possibility is that the market maker clearly does not want to dump at this level, but is repeatedly stirring up and wearing down the short positions' sentiment. After nearly killing off the shorts, he pumps it up, creating a bull trap. As retail investors increase their positions, he sells a little bit, and his market share is gradually taken away by retail investors. The market maker successfully executes a rug pull for arbitrage. Really! You! m! dog! (Narrative Analysis)
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Henry_y
· 12-22 19:52
Since everyone is on the opposite side of the market maker, his intention is 100% to pump and dump. If the price is in a sideways range, it is advised that everyone should not get on board and open orders.
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Henry_y
· 12-22 19:47
The guaranteed point is that the market maker definitely wants to dump, but at the same time, he doesn't want the value of the coin to drop, so he has to manipulate the market, create a bull trap, and let the bullish traders come in gradually before he dumps little by little. The market maker's method is very clever and intricate.
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MuziV
· 12-22 19:46
Note ⚠️ that the price pumped each time is getting lower.
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MuziV
· 12-22 19:44
It means not to let go of the short order; you can reduce the position when it goes down and add it back when it goes up! Control your position well!
$BEAT It is obvious that this market maker has a large appetite. If he directly dumps, he can forcefully earn some chips, but what the market maker is thinking is far from that simple. I can only say that the current level is not what the market maker wants. The U-shaped candlestick repeatedly wears down the short positions' sentiment. By the time the real plummet happens, the short positions' sentiment has already been worn down quite a bit, and everyone is hesitant to get on board, which is when he dumps. Another possibility is that the market maker clearly does not want to dump at this level, but is repeatedly stirring up and wearing down the short positions' sentiment. After nearly killing off the shorts, he pumps it up, creating a bull trap. As retail investors increase their positions, he sells a little bit, and his market share is gradually taken away by retail investors. The market maker successfully executes a rug pull for arbitrage. Really! You! m! dog! (Narrative Analysis)