How to spot cryptocurrencies that will explode: secrets not told by professionals because they don't want you to know them
1. High trading volume: the most traded lie in the market
Yes, trading volume seems important at first glance... but what is not said is that 85% of it may be fake.
Wash Trading makes project owners buy and sell between their own wallets to create an illusion of movement.
Unknown platforms displaying fantastical volumes through software manipulations then collapsing at the first real withdrawal.
The real secret? Monitor trading volume on OTC platforms (over-the-counter trading). If the numbers there exceed trading volume on public exchanges, know that whales are moving — silently — before the explosion.
2. Liquidity: the trap set in the name of safety
High liquidity means whale control. Currencies with medium liquidity are the top candidates for explosion.
Currencies with a market cap ranging from $50 to $200 million have a high inflation potential, without being fragile to sudden collapse.
Use the relative liquidity index:
(Daily trading volume ÷ market cap) × 100
If the ratio is between 5% and 20%, you are looking at a time bomb in the assembly phase.
3. Hidden propaganda: how projects engineer excitement before the explosion?
Currencies that explode do not scream 'buy me', but plant encrypted messages in the dark.
Mysterious tweets from unknown accounts include phrases like 'something big is coming'... often accompanied by a single emoji.
Fake leaks on Telegram channels hinting at contracts with huge companies, with no evidence.
The recurring scenario: merger rumor → price hype → news denial after selling amounts.
4. Venture financing: the dirty game that beginners don’t know
Funding does not always mean trust. Projects funded by unknown 'strategic' investors tend to explode suddenly.
Look for unfamiliar names among private sale rounds, often not appearing in the media.
Some projects pay money to fake investors just to be listed as partners. The goal: to create an illusion of trust.
5. Distribution pattern: when the chart hides a dirty game
The chart is not just a tool for technical display, but a stage for psychological crime.
The accumulation phase takes the form of a boring sideways movement with low trading volume — a signal that whales are quietly swallowing.
Then comes the amplification stage: a rise of 30-50% amid negative news to scare the weak and push them to sell.
The golden sign? Decrease in trading volume during a drop — means that whales are not selling, but waiting.
6. The final scenario: How do you spot the currency 48 hours before it explodes?
This is how those who know the game move:
Analyze the order book. If you spot a huge sell wall suddenly disappearing, this is a signal for the beginning of a deliberate pump.
Example: a sell wall at $1.00 disappears, then the price rises to $1.20 within minutes.
Use tools like Nansen and Arkham Intelligence to monitor large wallet movements before they reflect on the market.
And don't forget the 'whispers' — those coded messages that spread in closed groups, through which controllers communicate, usually using symbols like the whale or the moon.
7. Forbidden currencies: the biggest secret threatening the market
Some currencies are not found on CoinMarketCap, but they move millions daily under everyone's noses.
Often listed on only one platform, and with no clear identification document or containing glaring spelling mistakes.
If you find that the daily trading rate exceeds the market cap of the currency, know that manipulation has peaked.
Summary: You don't have to be a victim
Most explosions that occur are not random... but premeditated by hidden alliances.
The currency market does not reward intelligence, but rewards those who understand the game.
Don't look for the currency... look for the entities that move it.
And if you know who owns the game, you can predict its movement — before the show starts.
Did you understand the game?
Write the word 'manipulator' if you realize that what you read is just the beginning.
Or the word 'victim' if you feel that the market is just a reflection of your psychological weaknesses.