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$SKYAI Brothers! If this coin might be sold off by the whale whales next, you might have a question: why didn't the whale whales sell off near the high of 0.8 last night? This question hits the core immediately and is also the most critical point in distinguishing "genuine pump" from "manipulation." Not selling at the high last night isn't because they didn't want to, but because they couldn't, and they dared not. At that price level, they faced an impossible task: without enough bagholders, think about it, a coin that rose 3333% in 180 days, with a high of around 0.79 last night, how many retail investors would dare to rush in and buy? On the depth chart, buy orders are sparse. Large holders with hundreds of millions or billions in chips, if they really wanted to sell, placing an order would immediately break through the buy wall, triggering a waterfall, ultimately trapping themselves at the top. They don't not want to sell; they simply can't sell at that price. To maintain the illusion of a "bull market," and to facilitate subsequent selling, what they truly want to do is sell within a "seemingly cheap" range rather than at the all-time high. The typical manipulation script is: first push for a 3-4 times profit margin: cost at 0.1, push to 0.8. Then actively dump: use a small amount of chips to push the price from 0.8 down to 0.55, creating panic. The key step is to cultivate "bottom-fishing inertia": at this point, repeatedly create "pinpoint rebound" patterns around 0.55. Retail investor psychology: "I didn't buy at 0.8, now it's 0.55, 30% off, when it rebounds to 0.65, I’ll make a profit." See, this "relatively low" of 0.55 actually attracts more retail investors to rush in and "pick up cheap" than at 0.8. They are exploiting this psychology, selling chunks of the coin to bottom-fishers and rebound chasers at each seemingly supported price level. So, the recent sharp decline is very likely not "selling off," but "creating steps for selling." They push the price down from 0.8 to give you the illusion of a "cheap buy" opportunity. We previously mentioned the story of the boy who cried wolf; the wolf never came, and this time, you'll still think the wolf won't come.