Supply shortages don't just happen randomly—they persist because someone has a stake in keeping things tight. Whether it's controlling prices, limiting competition, or maintaining political leverage, scarcity becomes a tool. When you look at commodity markets or even crypto asset flows, the pattern's clear: whoever benefits from the shortage has incentives to keep it going. That's why real supply constraints often linger longer than market fundamentals would suggest.
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FOMOSapien
· 20h ago
Out-of-stock situations are never accidental; someone is pulling the strings behind the scenes.
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StableGeniusDegen
· 20h ago
Basically, it's just someone secretly choking the neck, the crypto circle is the best at playing this game.
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AirdropF5Bro
· 20h ago
This is the game of capital. Supply chain bottlenecks are not just accidents.
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MetaverseMigrant
· 20h ago
Wow, isn't this just the old monopoly trick? The crypto world plays the same way.
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GateUser-bd883c58
· 20h ago
This is exactly what I've been saying all along: shortages are never a coincidence; someone is always manipulating behind the scenes.
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SwapWhisperer
· 20h ago
Basically, it's about monopoly—whoever holds the chips can play this game.
Supply shortages don't just happen randomly—they persist because someone has a stake in keeping things tight. Whether it's controlling prices, limiting competition, or maintaining political leverage, scarcity becomes a tool. When you look at commodity markets or even crypto asset flows, the pattern's clear: whoever benefits from the shortage has incentives to keep it going. That's why real supply constraints often linger longer than market fundamentals would suggest.