Why don't I like to buy large amounts of unlocked coins???
Most unlocked coins mean that coins purchased in the early stages can be sold, but unlocking does not necessarily mean a direct sell-off. Shareholders gather to discuss whether it's better to sell at a high price or to sell off at a low price to create panic among retail investors before selling at a higher price later. It's hard to discern this, as not all unlocking projects unlock while pushing the price up like SUI; more projects are like ARB, where unlocking leads to a sell-off.
1: The coins pending unlocking have a common point. Look at ARB, OP, DYDX; when they are about to unlock and the coin price is high, shareholders rush to sell off for fear of missing out and selling at a low price. These shareholders are not united, making it difficult for the coin price to rise.
2: For unlocked coins, unless there is a united shareholder with a set goal, and then slowly and orderly selling off, look at ID which does this well, first pushing the price up 10 times, selling off most of it, then directly crashing by 60%, and then slowly washing the market to absorb the shares. Shareholders make a profit, early retail investors who came in also make a profit, while only later speculators are trapped at the peak, trembling in fear.
3: To summarize, unlocking-type coins are not as valuable as coins that are fully unlocked, old coins are not as good as new coins, public chain coins outperform over 80% of coins, and POW coins, if they have a major shareholder, can outperform over 90% of coins. Choose coins that have popularity, value, and consensus; the top 50 in the rankings are generally the best coins (excluding stablecoins).