:## šŸ¤” What's Happening Here?! 🤯


It seems like institutional players are trying to push the price down by putting up massive sell supply šŸ“‰. But despite that, the price keeps pumping up! šŸš€ What's the reason behind this crazy action?! šŸ¤”


Well, even if institutions place a huge supply, the price can't just crash instantly šŸ’„.


(Now, you might be thinking, "Then how does a big dump happen so suddenly?" šŸ¤” When that happens, there isn't a demand zone (where buy orders are stacked) in the downward direction, only support levels. Remember, demand zones and support levels are different things! ā˜ļø)


Demand zones are areas where a lot of buy limit orders are placed šŸ’°, which helps push the price back up. Support levels are simply price points where the price previously bounced with significant buying volume, maybe a few days, weeks, or even a month ago šŸ—“ļø. Now, no one in their right mind would place limit buy orders way back at those old support levels, expecting the market to come all the way down to fill them 🤪. Most limit orders are placed at support zones that are only 15 minutes to an hour old ā°. You can even see where most limit orders are stacked up by looking at the exchange's order book šŸ“–.


The reason the price bounces back from demand zones is because those limit buy orders need to be filled before the price can move further down. It's like a traffic jam of buy orders! 🚦 However, on the sell side, the price can directly blast through supply zones šŸ’„. This happens because demand zone limit orders can act as support for the supply. But on the buy side, when exchanges directly transfer tokens, the price can BOOM šŸš€! Even after some order filling at supply zones, the price often breaks through all the supply levels šŸ’Ŗ.


To understand this better, it's crucial to know that institutional players don't primarily use USDT to create demand and volume. They transfer tokens šŸ”„ – meaning they might short from the exchange and then bring those tokens back in to sell (creating supply) and collect USDT. USDT buying and selling is mostly done by retail traders šŸ§‘ā€šŸ’».


Exchanges have different ways of working with institutional and retail traders. Institutions need to move tokens in and out to influence price movement ā¬†ļøā¬‡ļø, while the world (retail) mostly buys and sells using USDT šŸŒ.


Hope this clears things up! šŸ˜‰ Let me know if you have any more questions! 😊


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