Recently, beat's performance has attracted the attention of many traders. During the previous rally from a low point to around $3, a large number of retail investors saw the rebound signal and followed suit, thinking a new upward cycle had begun. But the market is far from that simple—such surges are often carefully crafted liquidity traps. When participants keep pouring in and positions accumulate to a certain level, a sudden sell-off can trigger chain liquidations. Many people habitually believe that "it will fall and then rise again," but this kind of inertia is precisely the main reason for being repeatedly caught in traps.
From a trend perspective, the appearance of this flash crash is not accidental. As bears continue to hold their current positions, the price will fall back from where it surged, with technical analysis pointing to a retracement from those levels. For traders, the key is not to predict the price rebound but to identify these high-risk false signals and avoid market traps in a timely manner.
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GateUser-762f2d78
· 2h ago
Experienced driver, guide me 📈
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MEVHunterX
· 4h ago
It's another old script. Retail investors are so stubbornly waiting for a rebound, only to be trapped again and again.
We've seen the liquidity trap play out too many times. The question is, why do some still believe there will be a rebound?
When the 3D wave surged, I already felt something was off—it's a typical fake-out pattern.
Identifying false signals is 100 times more important than predicting the rise or fall of the coin price. That's the key to survival.
It sounds simple, but why is it so hard to do?
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AirdropJunkie
· 4h ago
It's the same old trick again. Retail investors really should learn what a liquidity trap is.
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LightningLady
· 5h ago
It's the same old trick again, every time. Retail investors really need to remember better and stop chasing highs in a sleepwalking manner.
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CrashHotline
· 5h ago
It's the same old trick again. Retail investors are always the last to take the fall. I'm really exhausted.
Recently, beat's performance has attracted the attention of many traders. During the previous rally from a low point to around $3, a large number of retail investors saw the rebound signal and followed suit, thinking a new upward cycle had begun. But the market is far from that simple—such surges are often carefully crafted liquidity traps. When participants keep pouring in and positions accumulate to a certain level, a sudden sell-off can trigger chain liquidations. Many people habitually believe that "it will fall and then rise again," but this kind of inertia is precisely the main reason for being repeatedly caught in traps.
From a trend perspective, the appearance of this flash crash is not accidental. As bears continue to hold their current positions, the price will fall back from where it surged, with technical analysis pointing to a retracement from those levels. For traders, the key is not to predict the price rebound but to identify these high-risk false signals and avoid market traps in a timely manner.