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$JELLYJELLY Abnormal Price Fluctuation Analysis
Friends who have read my previous articles on price manipulation can skip the introductory part.
For newcomers, first understand a concept — price manipulation does not necessarily mean an increase; it refers to abnormal price movements dominated by a single party. This situation is usually not the result of natural market supply and demand, but a deliberate market behavior.
Recently, some interesting signs have been found in trading data from a major exchange. From the coordination of trading volume and price trends, there are obvious irregularities — capital flow and market response do not match. Such phenomena are more likely to occur in coins where retail investors make up the majority.
Simply put, someone is using relatively small amounts of capital to leverage the entire price movement. You might see a surge or crash within a few minutes, but the actual trading depth and participation are far from proportional. This is a typical non-organic price movement.
For projects like JELLYJELLY, investors need to distinguish between two types of fluctuations: one is normal volatility driven by fundamentals and market sentiment, and the other is this manipulated abnormal fluctuation. The former has traceable signs, while the latter carries significant risk.