This week's market has been quite volatile. We're only halfway through January, and the fluctuations haven't stopped.
Looking back from late December last year to now, XRP has increased by over 12%, nearly double the same period's ETH gains. Sounds impressive, but on the flip side, the more violent the rise, the sharper the fall might be — this week, XRP dropped 11%, making it the worst performer among mainstream coins.
From a technical perspective, signs of irregularity have been evident since the end of last year. This kind of rally is essentially a process of energy accumulation; once enough energy is built up, a rebound occurs. Currently, the $2.50 level is clearly acting as resistance, with significant selling pressure piling up here, and some traders are starting to take profits.
The most interesting part is that, despite XRP's decline, speculative capital continues to pour in. Just this week, there have been an additional $3.58 million in long positions. This is quite confusing — are traders just taking a gamble, or do they have information about the market that hasn't been reflected yet?
From a capital flow perspective, whales seem to be battling this wave of volatility, and liquidity barriers are forming. XRP now exhibits a kind of "divergence" — the chart tells one story, but market funds tell another.
That 11% drop on the long-term chart essentially looks like a typical pullback after a rally. Who will end up laughing last — retail investors or institutions — remains to be seen in the coming days.
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This week's market has been quite volatile. We're only halfway through January, and the fluctuations haven't stopped.
Looking back from late December last year to now, XRP has increased by over 12%, nearly double the same period's ETH gains. Sounds impressive, but on the flip side, the more violent the rise, the sharper the fall might be — this week, XRP dropped 11%, making it the worst performer among mainstream coins.
From a technical perspective, signs of irregularity have been evident since the end of last year. This kind of rally is essentially a process of energy accumulation; once enough energy is built up, a rebound occurs. Currently, the $2.50 level is clearly acting as resistance, with significant selling pressure piling up here, and some traders are starting to take profits.
The most interesting part is that, despite XRP's decline, speculative capital continues to pour in. Just this week, there have been an additional $3.58 million in long positions. This is quite confusing — are traders just taking a gamble, or do they have information about the market that hasn't been reflected yet?
From a capital flow perspective, whales seem to be battling this wave of volatility, and liquidity barriers are forming. XRP now exhibits a kind of "divergence" — the chart tells one story, but market funds tell another.
That 11% drop on the long-term chart essentially looks like a typical pullback after a rally. Who will end up laughing last — retail investors or institutions — remains to be seen in the coming days.