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Jenae Cohens LYtt

Open Trade
OP Holder
OP Holder
Frequent Trader
1.3 Years
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18 Followers
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Bearish
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What the hell, it's as ugly as 💩, big position, replacing the second with you, this is even worse than the second $OP
What the hell, it's as ugly as 💩, big position, replacing the second with you, this is even worse than the second $OP
See original
@BinanceSquareCN @ you, is this useful? This control panel forcing the currency, can't we do a vote to take it down $OP #op {spot}(OPUSDT) Day, damn it
@币安广场 @ you, is this useful? This control panel forcing the currency, can't we do a vote to take it down $OP #op
Day, damn it
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Never spend a fortune on junk $OP {spot}(OPUSDT) The worst of the worst, it's too centralized, just look at the trend.
Never spend a fortune on junk $OP
The worst of the worst, it's too centralized, just look at the trend.
See original
Of course, buddy, here is the English translation of the previous paragraph, concisely retaining the core points, suitable for sharing with foreign friends: Hey bro, this chart of OP/USDT on the daily timeframe clearly shows one thing: A classic centralized pump-and-dump move — the whales cashed out, and retail got wrecked. Breakdown: 1. Price Action • Price pumped to 0.855, then dumped hard; • Now at 0.621, nearly back to the starting point; • This is a typical V-shape pump followed by staircase selling — signs of manipulation. 2. Indicators • RSI(6) = 17.56, extremely oversold, yet no bounce; • MACD shows a strong bearish trend; • OBV is falling sharply — consistent outflow of capital; • No volume drop — this is not a natural correction, it’s deliberate sell pressure. 3. Project Behavior This kind of pattern often occurs in: • Highly controlled or pseudo-decentralized projects; • Coins facing unlocking schedules, VC dumping, or internal sell pressure; • Hype-driven pumps followed by rug-style exit liquidity extraction. Suggestions • Do not buy the dip yet — oversold doesn’t mean reversal; • Wait for: RSI divergence + OBV stabilization + long bottom wick + volume drop — none of that’s happened yet; • Once the signal script is live, it’ll automatically catch these bottom setups — be patient. Summary This is one of those: “Fat pigs get fed, but dumb pigs get slaughtered.” Let me know if you’d like me to upgrade the script to better detect manipulative behavior like this — it’s doable!$OP
Of course, buddy, here is the English translation of the previous paragraph, concisely retaining the core points, suitable for sharing with foreign friends:
Hey bro, this chart of OP/USDT on the daily timeframe clearly shows one thing:
A classic centralized pump-and-dump move — the whales cashed out, and retail got wrecked.
Breakdown:
1. Price Action
• Price pumped to 0.855, then dumped hard;
• Now at 0.621, nearly back to the starting point;
• This is a typical V-shape pump followed by staircase selling — signs of manipulation.
2. Indicators
• RSI(6) = 17.56, extremely oversold, yet no bounce;
• MACD shows a strong bearish trend;
• OBV is falling sharply — consistent outflow of capital;
• No volume drop — this is not a natural correction, it’s deliberate sell pressure.
3. Project Behavior
This kind of pattern often occurs in:
• Highly controlled or pseudo-decentralized projects;
• Coins facing unlocking schedules, VC dumping, or internal sell pressure;
• Hype-driven pumps followed by rug-style exit liquidity extraction.
Suggestions
• Do not buy the dip yet — oversold doesn’t mean reversal;
• Wait for: RSI divergence + OBV stabilization + long bottom wick + volume drop — none of that’s happened yet;
• Once the signal script is live, it’ll automatically catch these bottom setups — be patient.
Summary
This is one of those:
“Fat pigs get fed, but dumb pigs get slaughtered.”
Let me know if you’d like me to upgrade the script to better detect manipulative behavior like this — it’s doable!$OP
See original
#op friends judge for themselves, it's disgusting. Don't touch it 😝😝😝😝 Wishing everyone wealth #chatGPT-4 can also judge $OP Of course, friends, here is the English translation of the previous message, succinctly preserving the core points, suitable for sharing with foreign friends: Hey bro, this chart of OP/USDT on the daily timeframe clearly shows one thing: A classic centralized pump-and-dump move — the whales cashed out, and retail got wrecked. Breakdown: 1. Price Action • Price pumped to 0.855, then dumped hard; • Now at 0.621, nearly back to the starting point; • This is a typical V-shape pump followed by staircase selling — signs of manipulation. 2. Indicators • RSI(6) = 17.56, extremely oversold, yet no bounce; • MACD shows a strong bearish trend; • OBV is falling sharply — consistent outflow of capital; • No volume drop — this is not a natural correction, it’s deliberate sell pressure. 3. Project Behavior This kind of pattern often occurs in: • Highly controlled or pseudo-decentralized projects; • Coins facing unlocking schedules, VC dumping, or internal sell pressure; • Hype-driven pumps followed by rug-style exit liquidity extraction. Suggestions • Do not buy the dip yet — oversold doesn’t mean reversal; • Wait for: RSI divergence + OBV stabilization + long bottom wick + volume drop — none of that’s happened yet; • Once the signal script is live, it’ll automatically catch these bottom setups — be patient. Summary This is one of those: “Fat pigs get fed, but dumb pigs get slaughtered.” Let me know if you’d like me to upgrade the script to better detect manipulative behavior like this — it’s doable!
#op friends judge for themselves, it's disgusting. Don't touch it 😝😝😝😝 Wishing everyone wealth #chatGPT-4 can also judge $OP

Of course, friends, here is the English translation of the previous message, succinctly preserving the core points, suitable for sharing with foreign friends:
Hey bro, this chart of OP/USDT on the daily timeframe clearly shows one thing:
A classic centralized pump-and-dump move — the whales cashed out, and retail got wrecked.
Breakdown:
1. Price Action
• Price pumped to 0.855, then dumped hard;
• Now at 0.621, nearly back to the starting point;
• This is a typical V-shape pump followed by staircase selling — signs of manipulation.
2. Indicators
• RSI(6) = 17.56, extremely oversold, yet no bounce;
• MACD shows a strong bearish trend;
• OBV is falling sharply — consistent outflow of capital;
• No volume drop — this is not a natural correction, it’s deliberate sell pressure.
3. Project Behavior
This kind of pattern often occurs in:
• Highly controlled or pseudo-decentralized projects;
• Coins facing unlocking schedules, VC dumping, or internal sell pressure;
• Hype-driven pumps followed by rug-style exit liquidity extraction.
Suggestions
• Do not buy the dip yet — oversold doesn’t mean reversal;
• Wait for: RSI divergence + OBV stabilization + long bottom wick + volume drop — none of that’s happened yet;
• Once the signal script is live, it’ll automatically catch these bottom setups — be patient.
Summary
This is one of those:
“Fat pigs get fed, but dumb pigs get slaughtered.”
Let me know if you’d like me to upgrade the script to better detect manipulative behavior like this — it’s doable!
See original
"The Fed adjusts their dot plot accordingly, so the dot plot is always changing, and stock traders know this," said Scott Colyer, CEO of Advisors Asset Management. "It's clear that the Fed really wants to cut rates at least once this year. And those rate cuts, even if there is only one, will still be supportive to stock prices." Gregory Kuhl, portfolio manager at Janus Henderson Investors, said: "The market and the Fed seem to be consolidating around the same view that interest rates are now appropriate, but the Fed still prefers to cut rates as the next move. Based on what we are learning from apartment landlords, we think the housing component of the CPI will continue to put downward pressure on the overall number, which may provide more progress signals from the Fed. Importantly, unlike private real estate, public REITs are already marked to market, so an environment where interest rates remain unchanged or fall should be a tailwind." Donald Kuhl, senior portfolio manager at Federated Hermes "I think the Fed definitely wants to see at least three or four months of lower inflation," Ellenberger said. "They want to make sure that inflation gets to 2% because the worst-case scenario for the Fed is if they cut rates and inflation goes back up and then they have to reverse the cuts and start raising rates again." Dave Lutz, director of traded funds at JonesTrading, said: "The dot plot was more hawkish than expected, which took some of the fuss out of today's move, but we need to see how the rest of the press conference is digested. It feels like the Bank of Japan is the only thing left this week, and we may see the VIX pull back and stocks near their highs." Dan Suzuki, deputy chief investment officer at Richard Bernstein Advisors, said: "Investors need to accept the fact that the Fed is not in charge. They are just responding to inflation, and inflation is responding to economic growth. Until there is a meaningful breakout in growth to the upside or downside, inflation will probably remain stubbornly above the Fed's target, and you are unlikely to see the Fed take any aggressive action." road
"The Fed adjusts their dot plot accordingly, so the dot plot is always changing, and stock traders know this," said Scott Colyer, CEO of Advisors Asset Management. "It's clear that the Fed really wants to cut rates at least once this year. And those rate cuts, even if there is only one, will still be supportive to stock prices."

Gregory Kuhl, portfolio manager at Janus Henderson Investors, said: "The market and the Fed seem to be consolidating around the same view that interest rates are now appropriate, but the Fed still prefers to cut rates as the next move. Based on what we are learning from apartment landlords, we think the housing component of the CPI will continue to put downward pressure on the overall number, which may provide more progress signals from the Fed. Importantly, unlike private real estate, public REITs are already marked to market, so an environment where interest rates remain unchanged or fall should be a tailwind."

Donald Kuhl, senior portfolio manager at Federated Hermes "I think the Fed definitely wants to see at least three or four months of lower inflation," Ellenberger said. "They want to make sure that inflation gets to 2% because the worst-case scenario for the Fed is if they cut rates and inflation goes back up and then they have to reverse the cuts and start raising rates again."

Dave Lutz, director of traded funds at JonesTrading, said: "The dot plot was more hawkish than expected, which took some of the fuss out of today's move, but we need to see how the rest of the press conference is digested. It feels like the Bank of Japan is the only thing left this week, and we may see the VIX pull back and stocks near their highs."

Dan Suzuki, deputy chief investment officer at Richard Bernstein Advisors, said: "Investors need to accept the fact that the Fed is not in charge. They are just responding to inflation, and inflation is responding to economic growth. Until there is a meaningful breakout in growth to the upside or downside, inflation will probably remain stubbornly above the Fed's target, and you are unlikely to see the Fed take any aggressive action."
road
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$GALA Damn it's really motionless!
$GALA Damn it's really motionless!
See original
Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said Tuesday that the Fed's policy stance is restrictive, but policymakers have not completely ruled out further rate hikes. "I don't think anyone has completely given up on raising rates," Kashkari said at an event in London on Tuesday. "I think the odds are low that we're going to raise rates, but I don't want to take anything off the table." Kashkari was echoing comments he made earlier on Tuesday in an interview, when he said officials should wait for more evidence that inflation is cooling before cutting rates, especially given the strong labor market and resilient economy. "Wage growth remains quite strong relative to what we think will eventually be consistent with our 2% inflation target," he said. He added that "we have time to assess how much downward pressure we're putting on demand before we make any new policy decisions." No need to rush to cut rates Earlier in the day, when asked what it would take for the Fed to cut rates once or twice this year, Kashkari said, "I think it would take more positive inflation data to give me confidence that it's time to cut rates." He also said the Fed could even raise rates if inflation doesn't fall further. Kashkari added, "I don't think we should rule anything out at this point." Kashkari believes that the U.S. economy remains "very resilient" and the labor market continues to be strong, especially in the service sector. He added that while nothing should be ruled out in terms of future policy, the Fed would be better off waiting and watching. Earlier this month, he said the Fed may need to keep interest rates stable for "an extended period of time," possibly a full year. He added: "Most people thought we would be in a recession at the end of last year, but that was not the case. On the contrary, our economic growth has been very strong. The U.S. consumer has remained amazingly resilient, and the housing market has remained resilient. Therefore, I don't think there is any need to rush to cut interest rates. We should take our time and get things done." Kashkari also said that the U.S. inflation level has been moving sideways at the beginning of this year, which makes him wonder whether the anti-inflation process is still continuing or the inflation level will be closer to 3%
Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said Tuesday that the Fed's policy stance is restrictive, but policymakers have not completely ruled out further rate hikes.

"I don't think anyone has completely given up on raising rates," Kashkari said at an event in London on Tuesday. "I think the odds are low that we're going to raise rates, but I don't want to take anything off the table."

Kashkari was echoing comments he made earlier on Tuesday in an interview, when he said officials should wait for more evidence that inflation is cooling before cutting rates, especially given the strong labor market and resilient economy. "Wage growth remains quite strong relative to what we think will eventually be consistent with our 2% inflation target," he said.

He added that "we have time to assess how much downward pressure we're putting on demand before we make any new policy decisions."

No need to rush to cut rates

Earlier in the day, when asked what it would take for the Fed to cut rates once or twice this year, Kashkari said, "I think it would take more positive inflation data to give me confidence that it's time to cut rates."

He also said the Fed could even raise rates if inflation doesn't fall further. Kashkari added, "I don't think we should rule anything out at this point."

Kashkari believes that the U.S. economy remains "very resilient" and the labor market continues to be strong, especially in the service sector. He added that while nothing should be ruled out in terms of future policy, the Fed would be better off waiting and watching.

Earlier this month, he said the Fed may need to keep interest rates stable for "an extended period of time," possibly a full year. He added:

"Most people thought we would be in a recession at the end of last year, but that was not the case. On the contrary, our economic growth has been very strong. The U.S. consumer has remained amazingly resilient, and the housing market has remained resilient. Therefore, I don't think there is any need to rush to cut interest rates. We should take our time and get things done."

Kashkari also said that the U.S. inflation level has been moving sideways at the beginning of this year, which makes him wonder whether the anti-inflation process is still continuing or the inflation level will be closer to 3%
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