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Is 0.1564 the fake top of $CLO? Is 0.2255 of $SKYAI the real prey? You can’t even see through which gap the money is slipping away.
Market maker operation ledger:
1. First, set up a liquidity trap for $SKYAI. The 24h trading volume is 67.7M—three times that of $CLO—but the price falls from 0.2427 to 0.2255. I place a 750K large order below the zero line, only running a buy-sell arbitrage robot with a 0.5% price spread. When the price is pushed down to 0.1583, trading volume suddenly spikes to 1.2M per minute—this is me having three wallets eat orders at the same time, manufacturing the illusion of panic sell pressure. The bid-one-ask-one depth spread for SKYAI widens from 5% to 11%, and the slippage assassin starts to kick in.
2. Shift to the blood pool of $CLO. 0.1586 is the 24h top, but my EA program triggers an automatic sell order at 0.1564, smashing out 1.8M chips within 2 minutes. When the price drops to 0.1074, 80% of the 23.1M volume concentrates within 15 minutes—the more retail investors rush to buy the dip, the lighter my inventory becomes. CLO’s RSI crashes from 82 to 39, and the deviation rate breaks through -6%—that’s the stampede zone I’m after.
3. Critical portfolio rebalancing. My current bottom position: CLO has 42% of the remaining inventory, with an average cost of 0.121; SKYAI has 68% built, with an average cost of 0.193. The next 48 hours’ execution path: first, let CLO rebound to the 0.132 pressure level to release 10% liquidity; at the same time, place SKYAI at 0.206 to accumulate, waiting for the next FOMO trigger so it can break through 0.2427.
Entry levels: Test CLO lightly in the 0.09-0.12 range, with a stop loss at 0.088. Buy low on SKYAI around 0.18-0.20, with the stop loss set at 0.172. Position control: CLO no more than 20% of total funds; SKYAI no more than 35%. Remember, my take-profit line is your chasing line—sell 50% of CLO at 0.23, and fully exit when SKYAI reaches 0.31.
The market doesn’t lie$