Retail investors why are they always trapped? It sounds like a luck issue, but there are actually strategies behind it. What you see are only the price fluctuations; what you don't see is that someone is controlling the rhythm behind the scenes. Let's first break down the game rules—
**Step 1: Dump the market to create panic** Suddenly, the price is pushed down, and rumors that "this coin is going to zero" spread everywhere. Retail investors panic and start selling, and their chips quietly fall into the harvesters' pockets. At this moment, low-priced chips are quietly accumulating.
**Step 2: Sideways consolidation to wear people out** The price stays flat or oscillates up and down, repeatedly messing with traders. Those who don't understand the market start doubting themselves, patience is gradually worn down, and they begin to give up their positions. Chips are thus gradually absorbed one by one.
**Step 3: Slow upward push** Once the chips are mostly accumulated, the price begins to rise slowly. Trading volume increases, enthusiasm builds, and FOMO starts to spread. Those caught earlier and new retail investors rush to buy high, fearing they will miss out.
**Step 4: Fake appearance of distribution** Manipulators intentionally create the illusion of "someone dumping the market" midway, scaring retail investors into quickly surrendering their chips. But in reality, the price keeps climbing higher. The final stage is the real distribution wave.
Throughout this process, the operators hardly need to predict the market; they just repeatedly exploit two basic instincts of retail investors: fear of losing money and desire for quick doubling.
**How to avoid getting trapped? It's actually that simple:** - Don't panic when prices fall; don't rush when prices rise. - Pay attention to market rhythm; don't be driven by emotions. - Better to be slow than to be the first to jump in.
Market opportunities are never lacking; what’s missing is the calm mindset that can stay steady. Whether you can recover your account in this cycle depends not on market rises or falls, but on your own execution ability.
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ForkInTheRoad
· 01-04 00:16
That's right, being played to death like this and still not knowing what's going on.
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Blockwatcher9000
· 01-03 09:52
Basically, it's a mindset game. My biggest takeaway over the past two years is learning how to hold my breath.
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LayerZeroJunkie
· 01-03 09:51
Basically, it's a mindset issue; it's really not difficult.
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AirdropBuffet
· 01-03 09:49
That's right, it's just about treating retail investors as a crop of leeks to be repeatedly harvested. Once you see through it, it's really not that difficult.
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AirdropAnxiety
· 01-03 09:48
Basically, it's a mindset issue. The main reason I get cut so easily is that I look at the K-line too frequently.
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FunGibleTom
· 01-03 09:24
That's right, this is exactly how I got trapped... My mindset is breaking down.
Retail investors why are they always trapped? It sounds like a luck issue, but there are actually strategies behind it. What you see are only the price fluctuations; what you don't see is that someone is controlling the rhythm behind the scenes. Let's first break down the game rules—
**Step 1: Dump the market to create panic**
Suddenly, the price is pushed down, and rumors that "this coin is going to zero" spread everywhere. Retail investors panic and start selling, and their chips quietly fall into the harvesters' pockets. At this moment, low-priced chips are quietly accumulating.
**Step 2: Sideways consolidation to wear people out**
The price stays flat or oscillates up and down, repeatedly messing with traders. Those who don't understand the market start doubting themselves, patience is gradually worn down, and they begin to give up their positions. Chips are thus gradually absorbed one by one.
**Step 3: Slow upward push**
Once the chips are mostly accumulated, the price begins to rise slowly. Trading volume increases, enthusiasm builds, and FOMO starts to spread. Those caught earlier and new retail investors rush to buy high, fearing they will miss out.
**Step 4: Fake appearance of distribution**
Manipulators intentionally create the illusion of "someone dumping the market" midway, scaring retail investors into quickly surrendering their chips. But in reality, the price keeps climbing higher. The final stage is the real distribution wave.
Throughout this process, the operators hardly need to predict the market; they just repeatedly exploit two basic instincts of retail investors: fear of losing money and desire for quick doubling.
**How to avoid getting trapped? It's actually that simple:**
- Don't panic when prices fall; don't rush when prices rise.
- Pay attention to market rhythm; don't be driven by emotions.
- Better to be slow than to be the first to jump in.
Market opportunities are never lacking; what’s missing is the calm mindset that can stay steady. Whether you can recover your account in this cycle depends not on market rises or falls, but on your own execution ability.