Money inflow doesn’t lie—if you know how to read it. While prices pumped hard today, one chart tells a very different story. Here’s what really moved $WIF , $ACT , and $TST — and what’s likely next.

Yes, money flow reflects the net buying or selling pressure, and the charts reveal how deeply it shaped today's action. For $WIF, inflow started around -1.9M and ended at -11.8M, with a short-lived spike mid-day. Despite this heavy outflow, price soared 30.86%, mostly driven by whale entries and meme coin hype. A $16M whale buy likely masked the net exit. But the persistent outflow—especially from 14:45 to 18:45—combined with an RSI near 75, hints a cooldown could be ahead.

On the other hand, ACT showed a more textbook case: inflow began negative, peaked at +22.3M around 14:45, then slid back to +1.8M. The sharp 38.16% price jump was supported by strong inflows, but the loss of momentum near the end suggests some profit-taking. With no major news tied to $ACT, this move looks like classic altseason “speculation”, amplified by short-term whale or retail buys.

TST had a relatively flat early session, then a sudden spike to +41.5M inflow by 14:45 drove a 22.90% price rally. However, by 18:45, it flipped to net negative—showing the entire move may have been a quick burst of accumulation followed by sell pressure. This aligns with earlier signs that TST was bouncing from a bleed-out phase, with the surge acting more like a recovery pump.

In short, #ACT and #Test (TST) moved in sync with money inflow. #WIF defied that rule—temporarily—because of large buys and sentiment. But the outflow now visible across all three could mark short-term exhaustion. Watch the next 12 hours closely—momentum could shift sharply.