The Real Game Is in the Spot Limit Order Book—Not Futures
I’m not here to play. I’m here to observe, analyze, and expose.
The price of SOL is currently 181. But if you’re only watching the chart, you’re missing the entire game. The real action—the real manipulation—is happening in the limit orders. That’s where price fluctuation is being engineered. That’s where volume is being controlled.
People ask: Why do traders keep placing and removing limit orders at prices the market hasn’t touched in months?
Simple. It’s not about buying or selling. It’s about creating artificial demand and supply.
Look closely at the spot order book, not the futures. Futures are 99% leverage—just noise. The real buttons that move the market are being pressed right here in the spot. Futures react. Spot commands.
Every two minutes, the order book changes. Orders appear and vanish. A guy places a $3 million sell order at 350 while the price is 181. Is he blind? No. He’s strategic. Two minutes later, he cancels it and places a buy order at 97. Again, nowhere near the current price.
Why? Because he’s not trading. He’s liquidating.
This is the exchange’s auto demand-supply system in action.
You want to understand how a price drops with 50 million in sell volume and then climbs back with just 10 million?
Here’s your answer:
Demand is manufactured—not by actual trades, but by placing orders where price never goes. It creates the illusion of interest, triggers reactions, and manipulates sentiment.
So if you’re serious about understanding the market, stop watching the future order book.
Watch the spot limit orders.
That’s where the secrets are.
That’s where the exchange pulls the strings.