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$BEAT Just finished a wave, and the market maker's hand is still bleeding. In 24 hours, it dropped from 8.7 to 5.4, with a trading volume of 410 million. Do you think retail investors are catching the falling knife? It's just a large capital washout tactic. The tentative order I placed on 5.25 was around a cost basis of 5.3, now showing a 2% unrealized loss, but the trading volume has decreased—low volume plunges are usually not a sign of panic selling; they are market makers pushing down the price to absorb chips.
My trading logic: enter lightly in the 5.3-5.4 range, set stop-loss below 5.0, and accept defeat if it breaks. If it rebounds above 6.2, sell half first, and hold the rest to gamble for 7.5. Don’t ask why I’m not chasing now; a 36% drop doesn’t mean it’s over, the market maker might still have a second wave of dumping. Keep an eye on the trading volume—if it suddenly surges and pulls back to 6.0, that’s the real move.
The market doesn’t lie— it tells you the market maker is still in the game, the key is whether you can endure being shaken off.