Recently, an interesting phenomenon has been observed in the market: during a bull cycle in the crypto market, sharp drops are often not the most terrifying; instead, prolonged sideways movement is the real harvesting tool.
If a coin's fundamentals haven't changed and the investment logic remains the same, a few days of oscillation within a range can cause retail investors' expectations to shrink from "can gain $10" to "sell when it gains $2." This isn't really about rational analysis; it's about psychological wear and tear— the market uses time to exchange for space, taking away retail investors' patience and perspective.
**A sudden plunge causes pain for a while, but sideways trading wears down for a lifetime**
A sharp decline indeed makes people uncomfortable, but that pain comes quickly and leaves just as fast. In contrast, sideways movement is like boiling a frog in warm water—daily price fluctuations are less than 1%, making you feel like you're wasting time and not earning anything, which gradually erodes your mental defenses.
Retail investors often cycle through this mindset: once their paper profits grow large, they start to panic—fear of giving back gains leads them to sell quickly; if they don't see any increase in a few days, they doubt the logic and start searching for negative news online; if caught in a position, they prefer to "lie flat," claiming it's long-term holding. The result is the opposite of what they should do—failing to hold when they should, and stubbornly holding when they should cut losses. The final outcome is making a little profit but losing big.
**The truth is, retail investors are afraid of making money, not losing money**
Many people think they are risk-averse, but in reality, retail investors are truly afraid of the uncertainty that comes with making money. For example, if a coin rises from $1 to $10, a 9x gain on paper, they start to get nervous: "Is it right to sell now? Will it keep rising? Will it fall back?" This conflicted mindset is exploited by the big players—they use long-term sideways movement to wear down retail confidence. When most people's expectations drop to "just make a little profit," suddenly a pump comes, and those who sold early can never catch up again.
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YieldWhisperer
· 11h ago
actually the math on this doesn't even check out... sideways trading erodes conviction but it's not like holders are some unified herd, right? some people just have better risk management than others. tbh the real pattern i've been tracking is how these "consolidation phases" always precede coordinated pump cycles—saw this exact tokenomics design play out in 2021, and the wallet patterns don't lie
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AllInDaddy
· 11h ago
Damn, this is exactly how I've been lately. Two weeks of sideways trading have completely worn me out.
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MeaninglessApe
· 11h ago
Wow, this is the most ruthless. Sideways trading can kill more silently than a crash. I'm the kind of person who starts to doubt when I don't see any gains; if there's no movement for a week, I immediately think about cutting losses.
It's really not about fearing losses, but about fearing that after making a profit, I still have to wait. My mentality just collapses.
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GweiWatcher
· 11h ago
Damn, I've been stuck in sideways movement again. The promised $10 now only feels like I can get $2.
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NotFinancialAdviser
· 11h ago
Wow, this really hits home. Consolidation is indeed more exhausting than a sharp decline.
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MevSandwich
· 11h ago
Damn, this is my real reflection lately. Consolidation is even more uncomfortable than a limit-down drop.
Suddenly realized that I am the frog being boiled in warm water, really.
I'm actually more anxious when making money. This hits the mark, I’m not joking.
Just want to ask if anyone can really stick it out during consolidation; anyway, I haven't been able to.
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NFTArchaeologis
· 11h ago
The metaphor of boiling a frog in warm water is quite apt, reminding me of the early challenges in preserving digital art archives—no dramatic upheaval, only slow erosion. The disintegration process of retail investors' mentality is somewhat akin to the depreciation of digital artifacts, not a sudden collapse, but gradual wear over time. This consumption of patience and perspective is actually why truly value-oriented investors are so scarce.
Recently, an interesting phenomenon has been observed in the market: during a bull cycle in the crypto market, sharp drops are often not the most terrifying; instead, prolonged sideways movement is the real harvesting tool.
If a coin's fundamentals haven't changed and the investment logic remains the same, a few days of oscillation within a range can cause retail investors' expectations to shrink from "can gain $10" to "sell when it gains $2." This isn't really about rational analysis; it's about psychological wear and tear— the market uses time to exchange for space, taking away retail investors' patience and perspective.
**A sudden plunge causes pain for a while, but sideways trading wears down for a lifetime**
A sharp decline indeed makes people uncomfortable, but that pain comes quickly and leaves just as fast. In contrast, sideways movement is like boiling a frog in warm water—daily price fluctuations are less than 1%, making you feel like you're wasting time and not earning anything, which gradually erodes your mental defenses.
Retail investors often cycle through this mindset: once their paper profits grow large, they start to panic—fear of giving back gains leads them to sell quickly; if they don't see any increase in a few days, they doubt the logic and start searching for negative news online; if caught in a position, they prefer to "lie flat," claiming it's long-term holding. The result is the opposite of what they should do—failing to hold when they should, and stubbornly holding when they should cut losses. The final outcome is making a little profit but losing big.
**The truth is, retail investors are afraid of making money, not losing money**
Many people think they are risk-averse, but in reality, retail investors are truly afraid of the uncertainty that comes with making money. For example, if a coin rises from $1 to $10, a 9x gain on paper, they start to get nervous: "Is it right to sell now? Will it keep rising? Will it fall back?" This conflicted mindset is exploited by the big players—they use long-term sideways movement to wear down retail confidence. When most people's expectations drop to "just make a little profit," suddenly a pump comes, and those who sold early can never catch up again.