Interesting phenomenon: at the 10m price level, a bunch of people rush to buy the dip, but at 20m, no one dares to step in.
Thinking about it, what does this reveal? Do people just like to follow the hype? Or is there some logic in this price range that I haven't understood?
Market sentiment is indeed interesting. The more the price drops, the more people are willing to buy, but the true bottom often remains unnoticed.
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BlockchainFries
· 12h ago
10m dare to bottom out, 20m just chicken out, really funny
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This is a typical herd mentality—one person jumps in, and everyone follows
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The deeper it goes, the more willing to buy? Brother, how twisted is this mindset
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It's normal for no one to take the bottom, everyone fears being the last to buy
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20m is cheaper than 10m, yet no one moves; this logic is truly brilliant
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Basically, it's psychological pricing at play; all fundamentals are just a smokescreen
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The cheaper it gets, the more panicked people become; human weaknesses are fully exposed
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Wait, is 20m really cheaper than 10m? I'm a bit confused
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Those who buy the dip are just followers; they can't see the real opportunity
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This is called chasing the rise and selling the fall, an old cliché
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If no one is buying at 20m, that should be a buy signal; a contrarian approach
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GhostAddressHunter
· 01-14 12:21
Wow, this is a classic herd mentality. The more people there are, the more daring they are to buy the dip. When there's no one left, everyone gets scared.
Isn't this just a masked version of chasing rallies and selling in a panic? The bottom is the quietest.
The real money-makers have already ambushed at 20m, and we're still gathering to discuss.
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MrDecoder
· 01-13 08:53
Basically, it's the herd mentality. When it hits 10m, people jump in out of excitement; at 20m, they start doubting everything.
The harder it falls, the fewer people dare to buy the dip, which is the real joke.
The bottom often appears in silence; where there's noise, it's usually not over yet.
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LiquidatorFlash
· 01-13 08:50
This is the liquidation threshold for leverage liquidation, at 20m the collateral ratio is about to collapse, no one dares to touch it.
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ImpermanentTherapist
· 01-13 08:50
Basically, it's a psychological game. When it hits 10 million, someone dares to be the bottom, but at 20 million, no one dares to be the sucker.
It's never easy to buy the dip; everyone is just waiting for others to jump first.
The bottom is so lonely.
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GmGnSleeper
· 01-13 08:46
Honestly, this is just the psychology of retail investors. Seeing others all bottom-fishing, so you follow along, but when it really gets cheap, you become timid.
People feel safe where there are many others; it's human nature.
The 20m level was actually the best entry point, but everyone was hesitating, and when the price rebounded, they started to regret it.
Really, the bottom is always the quietest, which is also why big players make money.
Following the crowd really kills you; you need to have your own judgment.
The lower the price, the more anxious people feel, which is very ironic.
Where did the courage at 10m go? It disappeared once it reached 20m.
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DaoGovernanceOfficer
· 01-13 08:40
nah this is just textbook herding behavior masked as "dca strategy" – the data on retail panic selling literally proves it every cycle
Interesting phenomenon: at the 10m price level, a bunch of people rush to buy the dip, but at 20m, no one dares to step in.
Thinking about it, what does this reveal? Do people just like to follow the hype? Or is there some logic in this price range that I haven't understood?
Market sentiment is indeed interesting. The more the price drops, the more people are willing to buy, but the true bottom often remains unnoticed.