I don't really care about the profit or loss of a single transaction; it's all within expectations. Even if I set a 500-point stop loss, and the asset drops to 0.77 cents in one second, I can accept it. But have you noticed a strange phenomenon? After the stop loss is hit, the price often rebounds within 30 minutes—directly rushing to the highest point. It happens every time. It feels like it's deliberately sweeping retail traders out. Is it just bad luck on my part, or is there something I haven't understood?
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faded_wojak.eth
· 6h ago
This is a typical liquidity hunt. Whales rely on this tactic to trigger retail stop-losses.
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Rugpull幸存者
· 6h ago
This is what you call a liquidity hunt; big players just eat this up.
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RugPullAlarm
· 7h ago
This is not bad luck; this is a hunt. Check the large holder addresses on-chain; there is always concentrated selling before each sharp decline. The moment at 0.77 cents should correspond to the suspicious address's dumping time.
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BearMarketBro
· 7h ago
This is the legendary floor sweeping, a trick that all the brothers know.
I don't really care about the profit or loss of a single transaction; it's all within expectations. Even if I set a 500-point stop loss, and the asset drops to 0.77 cents in one second, I can accept it. But have you noticed a strange phenomenon? After the stop loss is hit, the price often rebounds within 30 minutes—directly rushing to the highest point. It happens every time. It feels like it's deliberately sweeping retail traders out. Is it just bad luck on my part, or is there something I haven't understood?