There is a phenomenon worth warning about: whenever the price of certain tokens drops to a low level, someone in the community will aggressively promote it, claiming it's an "excellent buying opportunity." But this logic hides a trap.
The problem lies in the token supply side. As long as the project team is willing, they can continuously release new tokens through an issuance mechanism to dump the market. Billion or hundred-billion scale is not unusual at all. You might think you've bought the bottom, but in reality, you've just been precisely cut.
The essence of this market is a game of information asymmetry and cognitive differences. Promoters and holders want more bagholders to enter, thereby transferring wealth. Their way of making money is by shifting funds from your account into their pockets.
So the core advice is simple: no one should easily believe that a low price is an opportunity. Unless you truly understand the project's economic model, issuance plan, and practical application, a low price is actually the biggest risk signal.
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APY追逐者
· 6h ago
You're absolutely right, claiming that low prices are an opportunity is a narrative that really needs to stop.
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DegenTherapist
· 6h ago
Low prices are just traps; I've seen through this long ago. A bunch of project teams are just relying on issuance to harvest retail investors.
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bridge_anxiety
· 6h ago
Oh no, it's that same old "buy the dip for guaranteed profit" nonsense. I'm really tired of hearing it.
Only after being cut can you understand that a low price doesn't necessarily mean an opportunity.
A secondary issuance can crush the stock, making your small chips instantly worthless. Still dreaming about it?
In today's world, information asymmetry is everything. Retail investors are just lambs waiting to be slaughtered.
Let me ask you, have you actually read the secondary issuance plan? Or are you just listening to others talk nonsense?
Wake up, everyone. Cheap goods are often the most expensive.
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DeadTrades_Walking
· 6h ago
The tired rhetoric of "low-price trap" has been heard too many times, but some people are still falling for it.
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Honestly, the real killer move is the issuance increase. How many people have been painfully cut by this knife?
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You dare to buy the dip without understanding the economic model? Serves you right for being precisely harvested.
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Here we go again. Every time there's a big drop, the community starts creating myths. I've heard the phrase "excellent opportunity" a hundred times.
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Information asymmetry is the original sin of this market, there's no way around it.
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Not many people seriously look at the supply side; most just want to get in quickly and make a quick buck.
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Issuance increases of hundreds of millions or billions are not jokes; this is the most realistic scenario.
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Waiting for low prices equals opportunity? Wake up, everyone.
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The game of wealth transfer is always about a few making money, while the majority pay the bill.
There is a phenomenon worth warning about: whenever the price of certain tokens drops to a low level, someone in the community will aggressively promote it, claiming it's an "excellent buying opportunity." But this logic hides a trap.
The problem lies in the token supply side. As long as the project team is willing, they can continuously release new tokens through an issuance mechanism to dump the market. Billion or hundred-billion scale is not unusual at all. You might think you've bought the bottom, but in reality, you've just been precisely cut.
The essence of this market is a game of information asymmetry and cognitive differences. Promoters and holders want more bagholders to enter, thereby transferring wealth. Their way of making money is by shifting funds from your account into their pockets.
So the core advice is simple: no one should easily believe that a low price is an opportunity. Unless you truly understand the project's economic model, issuance plan, and practical application, a low price is actually the biggest risk signal.