Newcomers ask "how many times can it rise?", while veterans only ask "who will take over?"
The most common question newcomers ask when entering the market is: "How many times can this coin rise?"
But veterans never ask about the rise; they only ask: "Who will take the chips I sell?"
Newcomers focus on the potential of the coin, while veterans focus on the reality of exiting.
In the crypto world, every rise means someone is willing to take your order at a high price. Without a buyer, the rise is just an illusory number.
Veterans analyze:
Can the narrative of this project spread? How many newcomers can it attract?
Which media and KOLs will actively promote it? Is the relay of communication strong enough?
Has the recognition of retail investors reached its peak? Are there still people not in the market?
They are not buying the "future"; they are buying "the next crowd that can be fooled."
Meanwhile, newcomers only focus on historical K-lines and imagined potential, ignoring that there's only so much market capital. A coin can still rise not because it’s cheap, but because there are still people who can be deceived.
The crypto market is a relay race; without enough fresh blood, there is no price for you to exit.
Veterans always think about the buyer:
Is it new retail investors from the community?
Is it traffic from exchange rankings?
Or is it a new narrative that can spill over?
Trading coins is essentially a game of "emotional contagion" and "consensus shift."
Newcomers only imagine the finish line, while veterans first find a way out.