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$AIO surged 73% in a single day to 0.2250, while $CLO only rose 34%, grinding up to 0.1535—but the trading volume is nearly 9 times higher. This isn’t a “charging” call; it’s the meat grinder’s temperature spread. Who do you believe?
First, look at $AIO’s long-side logic: a three-day, double-speed crushing of spot execution—0.1951 holds firmly above 0.15; funds are stomping on the gas, and market consensus is stacking higher. Trading volume hit 157 million dollars; off-exchange buy orders haven’t stopped. As long as the casino is still open, you won’t end up losing down to just your underwear. On the technical chart, a big bullish candle breaks through the previous high at 0.185; if the pullback doesn’t break 0.17, people will keep stepping in. Retail Fomo sentiment hasn’t drained yet.
But don’t pretend to be blind to the bears’ case, either: within 24 hours, it was dumped from 0.2250 back to 0.1951—this is the textbook move for distribution at high levels. Turnover rate explodes, but the price can’t hold, and the “operator settling the account” playbook is already on stage. If the psychological level of 0.2 gets smashed through, then below 0.14 is a light-speed slide. Anyone chasing the rally today who jumps in will be the one standing guard tomorrow. A 73% gain isn’t normal. The main force is lifting the price just to dump the bags onto the next buyer—you sure you’re not the last one paying the bill?
Now look at $CLO: a 34% gain is relatively mild. 0.1487 hovers below 0.15; as it hasn’t “lifted off” yet, there’s still a boarding window. Trading volume is only 18 million dollars, which shows it hasn’t reached full-scale collective partying; before retail rushes in, the main force can still run, but it won’t run clean. There’s room to test 0.18. The downside line at 0.1073 is clear; even if it retraces, it’s a healthy correction within 15%. Its “tough-to-kill” attribute is stronger than AIO’s.
But its bearish signals are even more glaring: 0.1535 is a hard ceiling—after three failed attempts to break through, bulls still couldn’t get it to hold. The bulls’ fatigue is more obvious than a middle-aged person staying up late gaming. Liquidity is missing that last bit: with an 18M pool, a single 10,000-dollar order can carve out a 2% hole. If you misclick and mistime the slippage, you’ll just get served. Most mainstream funds are siphoning off into AIO; $CLO is the forgotten supporting role. Without attention, no one will help raise the sedan.
Trading advice: If you want to play AIO, bet around 0.19 with a light position. Set the stop-loss at below 0.175. Take profit before it falls back from 0.225 by exiting half. Don’t let position size exceed 5%. $CLO is suitable for swing trading: buy at 0.145, take profit at 0.16, and set stop-loss at 0.135. No greed, no lingering. For both, set only one-way orders—don’t hedge to trap yourself. Want to see my follow-up real-time watch and analysis? Follow me. Place your bet and leave it.
If it goes up, deduct 1—if it crashes, deduct 2. $