One of the biggest reasons $GPS isn’t moving consistently — and when it does, it pumps suddenly and dumps just as fast — is because of low volume.

If you understand trading, you should know this: if a coin has a “Monitoring” tag, you should avoid it. That’s usually the first red flag that the coin could be manipulated. No analysis — whether technical or psychological — really applies to such tokens. Avoiding it is the smartest move.

Currently, about 80% of GPS’s supply is locked, and the remaining 20% is unlocked and distributed across public sale, private sale, ecosystem, and so on. In such low-liquidity tokens, even one large order can move the price dramatically in either direction.

Adding to that risk is the unlock mechanism. A cliff unlock means no tokens are released until a set date — then, a large chunk unlocks all at once. For example, if you're vested 1,000 tokens with a 6-month cliff, you get nothing for six months, then suddenly all 1,000 tokens at once. This often causes sharp sell-offs, especially from insiders cashing out.

In contrast, a linear unlock means tokens are released slowly over time. If 1,000 tokens are vested over 10 months, you get 100 each month — which smooths out price impact and makes it easier for the market to absorb.

Cliff unlocks carry a high risk of sudden dumps, while linear unlocks are more stable but still cause gradual dilution. Always review token unlock schedules in the whitepaper or on platforms. In the case of GPS, about 8.42% of the total supply is set to unlock on July 16 — and that alone could trigger major volatility.

@Sellfish Pro