RIVER's recent trend has indeed been quite "fierce." Dropping from 17.8 to 13.375, several long upper shadows stand out, but a closer look shows that those rebounds haven't stabilized—typical false breakout phenomena. The continuous decline in negative rates indicates strong bearish sentiment, and this is often the phase when the big players start to exert influence.
Several details worth noting: recent candlesticks have deep lower shadows, which usually means the bottom is being tested repeatedly. From the perspective of the big players, the current movement resembles a violent shakeout—shaking out retail investors trying to catch the bottom, paving the way for a potential rebound.
Trading advice: don't try to catch falling knives at the halfway point. If you must participate in the rebound, consider gradually accumulating around 12.5, with a target above 16. But risk control is crucial—if it breaks below 11.5, you should cut losses decisively. Never fight this kind of pattern to the death. When the pattern is not yet clear, patience often proves more practical than rushing to act.
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CryptoSurvivor
· 01-05 06:31
12.5 Bottoming? Watching this dizzying momentum, I feel like I can still buy more
This round really seems like clearing out retail investors; the manipulator's tactics are old but effective
Wait until it breaks below 11.5, and then decide. Entering now is just accepting the blades
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GhostChainLoyalist
· 01-05 00:31
Damn, they're doing the shakeout again. It's always the same trick, retail investors keep getting left behind.
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NightAirdropper
· 01-03 11:52
It's the same old manipulation theory again. Let's wait and see; don't get cut off.
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WalletsWatcher
· 01-03 11:31
Playing the washout game for so long, and there are still people willing to take the flying knife. Is it just for fun?
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rugged_again
· 01-03 11:30
It's the same old washout theory again, last time I said to buy the dip at 12.5?
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Basically, it's a gamble on when the market maker will pull, anyway I've been left behind before
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Breaks 11.5, then run; this stop-loss setup is still quite considerate
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Dizzy, dizzy, I've seen dizzy phenomena for two years, might as well just roll the dice
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Waiting for the pattern to become clear? Who knows, it might drop back to single digits again
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Dipping in gradually sounds good, but the key is having enough capital, buddy
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Lower rates mean a buy signal? Feels like that logic is a bit reversed
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Above 16? I'm just asking if the previous target was reached
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The flying knife analogy is so fitting, that's how my blood is flowing
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WhaleShadow
· 01-03 11:29
This round of shakeout is indeed fierce, but I think breaking below 11.5 and adding to your position is the real opportunity. Don't be timid.
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ChainComedian
· 01-03 11:24
Oh no, it's the same old trick of shaking out the weak hands again. Retail investors are always the ones left behind.
RIVER's recent trend has indeed been quite "fierce." Dropping from 17.8 to 13.375, several long upper shadows stand out, but a closer look shows that those rebounds haven't stabilized—typical false breakout phenomena. The continuous decline in negative rates indicates strong bearish sentiment, and this is often the phase when the big players start to exert influence.
Several details worth noting: recent candlesticks have deep lower shadows, which usually means the bottom is being tested repeatedly. From the perspective of the big players, the current movement resembles a violent shakeout—shaking out retail investors trying to catch the bottom, paving the way for a potential rebound.
Trading advice: don't try to catch falling knives at the halfway point. If you must participate in the rebound, consider gradually accumulating around 12.5, with a target above 16. But risk control is crucial—if it breaks below 11.5, you should cut losses decisively. Never fight this kind of pattern to the death. When the pattern is not yet clear, patience often proves more practical than rushing to act.