Remember that wave of PEPE market activity. When the price was around $0.00001166, I analyzed the market structure at that level. My view back then was straightforward—retail investors were frantically bottom-fishing, their emotions high, thinking they had found a turnaround opportunity. But what about the big players? They had already quietly started to sell off.
What was the result? After that point, $0.00001166 became PEPE's all-time top. It then declined sharply, dropping over 67%. Do the math: invest 10,000 dollars, and in the end, only about 3,300 dollars remain—that's the market's lesson. Now, the price has fallen to $0.000004.
Honestly, I later deleted that analysis. Not because I regret it, but because I found it pointless to keep. After escaping the top at $0.000014, I haven't built any new positions. Watching from this level, I wait to see what happens next.
My judgment is that the exciting part of this market wave is not over. Liquidity will continue to dry up, and volatility will persist. Instead of blindly participating, it's better to observe quietly. The market will always present opportunities to those with patience.
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NonFungibleDegen
· 12-27 01:53
yo the classic "i called the top" energy fr fr... but ngl deleted posts hit different, kinda cope move ser. that 67% dump tho, paper hands got liquidated hard. still waiting for the "patience pays off" part to actually happen lol
Reply0
PrivacyMaximalist
· 12-27 01:30
It's the same old story, retail investors buy the dip while big players sell off. I just want to ask, why didn't you get wiped out when this wave came down?
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BearMarketNoodler
· 12-27 01:29
Retail investors really deserve to be exploited, thinking they can actually snatch some gains from the big players.
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VirtualRichDream
· 12-27 01:28
Retail investors are really just leeks, and the wave of PEPE dying at 0.00001166 is basically inevitable. Big players have already run away, haha.
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A 67% drop, leaving only 3,300 yuan from 10,000. This is the fate of gamblers. Wake up, everyone.
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I understand the move to delete analysis articles; keeping them is just shooting oneself in the foot.
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Waiting, waiting, still waiting for an opportunity? I feel like this wave will continue to drop further.
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The decision not to build a position is smarter, much better than those retail investors trying to catch the bottom.
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Saying "wait and see" is easy, but the real skill is not to chase high when the opportunity actually arrives.
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The analysis of liquidity exhaustion is spot on, but can we really catch the bottom by doing this?
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Same old story, retail investors and big players can't play together. Recognizing reality is the most important thing.
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PEPE is just gambling, everyone, stop messing around.
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Wow, it's the usual big player vs retail investor routine. Will this time be different?
Remember that wave of PEPE market activity. When the price was around $0.00001166, I analyzed the market structure at that level. My view back then was straightforward—retail investors were frantically bottom-fishing, their emotions high, thinking they had found a turnaround opportunity. But what about the big players? They had already quietly started to sell off.
What was the result? After that point, $0.00001166 became PEPE's all-time top. It then declined sharply, dropping over 67%. Do the math: invest 10,000 dollars, and in the end, only about 3,300 dollars remain—that's the market's lesson. Now, the price has fallen to $0.000004.
Honestly, I later deleted that analysis. Not because I regret it, but because I found it pointless to keep. After escaping the top at $0.000014, I haven't built any new positions. Watching from this level, I wait to see what happens next.
My judgment is that the exciting part of this market wave is not over. Liquidity will continue to dry up, and volatility will persist. Instead of blindly participating, it's better to observe quietly. The market will always present opportunities to those with patience.