In the fields of cryptocurrency or financial investment, the current perspectives and behavioral patterns of market participants can be categorized into two types, which appear similar on the surface but have essential differences:
The first type of participant is actually speculators or illegal fund operators. They pretend to trade as ordinary secondary market investors, but in reality, they profit by deliberately creating positive market expectations.
This group releases optimistic statements to stabilize market sentiment when prices fall and loudly promotes their investment results to attract followers when prices rise.
Their typical tactic is to first attract funds with false prosperity, then use market fluctuations to harvest retail investors, and even during market crashes, they mislead investors through public opinion to maximize their own interests.
The second type of investor makes independent judgments and value assessments about the market, choosing investment targets autonomously and willingly sharing their viewpoints.
They gain a sense of achievement from successful investments during market uptrends, but also face decision-making challenges when their assets shrink during downturns.
These investors tend to continuously optimize their investment strategies through ongoing learning and experience accumulation, gradually enhancing their professional capabilities and achieving self-growth and improvement of their investment systems amid market fluctuations.