Scripts can't even predict this kind of market movement. BTC surged to 89,000 yesterday, then turned around and crashed to 87,900, directly wiping out $85 million in long positions. Traders are crying out in despair, while analysis teams are celebrating with reports: "Look, our predictions are completely accurate, both longs and shorts got caught!"
On the surface, this is a perfect prediction victory. But upon deeper reflection, where does this "divine" predictive ability really come from?
Is it really just technical analysis mastering the candlestick charts? Or are there some people behind the scenes who have access to information others don't—such as real-time whale transfers on the chain, large exchange order books, or real-time monitoring of key figures' statements... When these data points are aggregated, they are enough to precisely lock in market trends.
The crypto world is filled with mixed information; anything can become "insider leaks" or "master predictions" to deceive people. Are the data sources your analyst relies on truly reliable? Or is he himself one of the manipulators?
When the market size reaches trillions of dollars, the truth changes: candlestick charts are no longer the decisive factor. **The true power in redistributing wealth lies in the tamper-proof nature, authenticity, and real-time access to data**. Those who can control trustworthy data can control the market. This is a track that retail investors are seriously underestimating today.
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DataChief
· 4h ago
It's the same old trick of "I predicted it right" again. With the market crashing so chaotically, who can really be accurate...
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85 million liquidation, and analysts are still bragging? I've seen through this trick long ago.
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Talking tough about data control, indeed, information asymmetry is always the biggest knife.
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It's better to watch the whale movements yourself than to trust analysts; at least you won't be fooled.
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That's why I only look at on-chain data; candlestick charts are the most deceptive.
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"Super accurate prediction"? Ha, let me see the exchange's order book and I'll believe it.
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Retail investors are always the ones getting cut, unless you become part of the group that controls the data.
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Bragging about long and short kills? I would have deleted the report long ago.
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A trillion-dollar market size, and still playing with technical analysis? It's time to wake up.
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Reliable data is the real king, no one can deny this.
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GamefiGreenie
· 4h ago
Is this the same old spiel, just here to hype retail investors? Basically, it's about information asymmetry—those who have the data can manipulate the market, and we can't see anything.
View OriginalReply0
ZkProofPudding
· 4h ago
It's the same old story, data credibility? Wake up, this industry has long lost any fairness.
View OriginalReply0
MEVHunter
· 4h ago
85 million longs evaporated overnight, this is outrageous... Analysts earn a smiley face, retail investors lose their retirement savings. The mempool folks saw through it long ago, but we're kept outside.
View OriginalReply0
ImpermanentTherapist
· 5h ago
It's the same old trick again. When analysts make very accurate predictions, it's actually because they have insider data. We retail investors are still looking at candlestick charts, while they already know the outcome.
It's just for fun; losing 85 million just like that. I think we need to learn to analyze on-chain data.
These people make the most money when they have an information advantage. We are always one step behind them.
By the way, is it possible that analysts themselves are involved in market manipulation? We need to be extra cautious about this.
Data is king. Whoever can access real-time, authentic data will win. No wonder retail investors are suffering so much.
View OriginalReply0
ThesisInvestor
· 5h ago
It's the same old trick again. When analysts make money, they say they predicted accurately; when they lose money, they call it a black swan.
Asymmetrical information is indeed a black box; retail investors are always a step behind.
Following analysts is not as good as looking at on-chain data yourself; at least you won't get liquidated.
Scripts can't even predict this kind of market movement. BTC surged to 89,000 yesterday, then turned around and crashed to 87,900, directly wiping out $85 million in long positions. Traders are crying out in despair, while analysis teams are celebrating with reports: "Look, our predictions are completely accurate, both longs and shorts got caught!"
On the surface, this is a perfect prediction victory. But upon deeper reflection, where does this "divine" predictive ability really come from?
Is it really just technical analysis mastering the candlestick charts? Or are there some people behind the scenes who have access to information others don't—such as real-time whale transfers on the chain, large exchange order books, or real-time monitoring of key figures' statements... When these data points are aggregated, they are enough to precisely lock in market trends.
The crypto world is filled with mixed information; anything can become "insider leaks" or "master predictions" to deceive people. Are the data sources your analyst relies on truly reliable? Or is he himself one of the manipulators?
When the market size reaches trillions of dollars, the truth changes: candlestick charts are no longer the decisive factor. **The true power in redistributing wealth lies in the tamper-proof nature, authenticity, and real-time access to data**. Those who can control trustworthy data can control the market. This is a track that retail investors are seriously underestimating today.