The market lacks momentum, and the 'artificial monsters' come to make their presence felt.

The long-lost delisting list has re-emerged, and all of them are low market cap. Coins with contracts are being pulled up by funds, while those without contracts are diving directly. Whether they can survive depends entirely on the direction of contract positions, the firepower of speculative funds, and the tacit understanding with the main players.

The pattern has long been established: during times of market stagnation, it is easiest to hatch speculative stocks; when the market is hot, it becomes a zone for the main players to offload their holdings. Controlling funds are unwilling to compete for traffic in hot sectors; they only seem 'cost-effective' when the market is at its freezing point.

Comparing the current situation to pig farming: pigs grow quickly, so you wait until the holiday to slaughter them; if they don't grow, and meat prices are about to drop, you act immediately. The delisting day is still far off, and the script is not finished. Don't forget about the 'firecracker' Alpaca from back in the day, which was first smashed down 80% into a deep pit, only to be lifted to a high rate by speculative funds later—markets are always built through action, not just by shouting.