$BTC This trend feels like it's forcing people to chase the highs; it dips a little and then gets pulled back immediately. If you hesitate, you miss out. Do you chase or not chase?
The current cryptocurrency market and the US stock market have basically become Trump's cash cow. His son's fund is clearly taking advantage of insider information to position itself in advance, going long at one moment and short at another, with each operation timed perfectly.
In the few months since Trump took office, he has already siphoned off billions of dollars from the market. The liquidity in the cryptocurrency market has been drained by him, and the stock market is next to be harvested. What's worse is that this erratic behavior not only harvests funds but also destroys market sentiment, forcing more and more people to choose to exit the market. $BTC
In a bad overall environment No matter how much you earn, it will invisibly be lost I made a few thousand U during this time I didn't expect the market to drop so severely $BNB
The innovation pace of the crypto world still depends on foreigners The locals only follow trends and imitate The current methods have become chaotic They should be able to come up with the next new thing, right? $BNB
HyperliquidX really needs to change its mechanism.
The annualized yield of HLP is indeed good, but this is based on the statistical foundation that most gamblers will eventually lose everything, making it possible for the counterpart to profit. However, now, some whales are specifically targeting small-cap meme shorts, forcing HLP to act as the counterpart and directly eroding the HLP liquidity pool. If this continues, HLP will eventually go bankrupt due to these whales.
This is also why major exchanges like Binance restrict large contract orders on small tokens; a market without a counterpart is uncontrollable, and prices can be completely manipulated and crash.
If all of HLP's money came from the founders, it wouldn't matter; they can lose their own money if they're foolish. But the problem is that many users' funds are involved, and such a mechanism flaw poses a significant risk to users.
Making contract trading transparent is indeed correct, but risk management cannot be absent. The depth of small-cap memes is already weak, and A9-level whales can easily dominate the market, especially with high leverage available; this operation is really self-destructive 😅$BNB
Everyone is shouting that Binance voting is unfair, and project teams are spending money to buy votes. But the question is, how can a project that can't even afford to buy votes have the funds to build? How can it sustain market interest?
Don't be naive, the market is inherently survival of the fittest. $BNB
A friend of mine entered the space last year, and at that time he was incredibly lucky. With a capital of 50,000 U, he relied on pre-sales and held on firmly against several low-quality projects, and by December, his funds peaked at 500,000 U. At that time, he was extremely inflated with confidence. I advised him to switch to mainstream coins, but he stubbornly refused to listen. As a result, he kept incurring losses over the next few months, unwilling to cut his losses and kept increasing his positions. In the end, the outcome was tragic, and his all-in assets nearly went to zero.
Now he is very confused, and my advice to him is: start practicing with small funds, learn on-chain analysis, like tracking whales with Nansen, or trade mainstream coins in the spot market. For example, holding #BNB #BTC in the long term. Brothers, do you have any tips to help my friend out! $BNB
Market short-term sentiment drives, FOMO + narrative is the eternal killer move. Even if there’s a rug pull, changing a token standard, switching chains, or adding some AI hype, capital still flows in.
Speculators chase short-term liquidity, not fundamentals; real on-chain data and smart contract audits are often overlooked in this type of cyclical rotation. Ultimately, short memories and quick games are the liquidity code of the crypto world. $BNB
The current KOLs really lack competence. Retail investors rush in and get rug-pulled, and KOLs just shift the blame, saying it was an advertisement, completely washing their hands of it. If they make a profit, they can post ten tweets bragging about how great they are, taking everyone along for the ride until they're stuffed. This double-faced game is played too well.
Currently, most KOLs rely on traffic to make a living, and very few truly understand trading. On-chain data statistics show that over 60% of KOLs calling trades have a win rate of less than 50%. $BNB
Just cleared out the counterfeit duvet covers and memes Directly cut losses Need to take a break recently, staying up late every day on the chain to edit My body can't take it anymore $BNB
How to make money in the crypto world? This is a dilemma that troubles everyone! Playing #meme and being a step behind can either lead to a return to the principal amount or a direct halving or going to zero. In 2023, over 70% of new meme coins had their market value wiped out within three months.
Speaking of contracts, if you open in the wrong direction, you have to hold on tight; a 50x leverage liquidation within minutes is not a dream. Spot trading can also be exhausting; if you buy too early and can't hold on, you'll panic at the first drop, just like #BTC dropped from $69,000 in June 2021 to $16,000, causing most retail investors to cut their losses and exit.
So what is the core of making money? Timing + Strategy. Meme trading relies on speed, catching the hot topics, like #SHIB which surged ten thousand times, but that's just a miracle for a few coins. If you miss out, don't chase the high. If you sell too early, don't overthink it. For spot trading, you need to pick the right targets, like #BNB which increased 20 times over five years, proving to be more reliable than many altcoins. $BNB