PIPPIN has been fluctuating between 0.35 and 0.40 recently, which doesn't seem to indicate an imminent new trend. Instead, it looks like the main force is in the process of transferring positions.
Previously, it rose from 0.26 all the way to 0.404, with a clear rapid and significant upward surge, indicating that funds are "igniting" the market. But at the 0.38 to 0.40 range, things started to change—trading volume decreased, and more upper shadows appeared on the candlesticks. This suggests that the number of follow-buyers is decreasing, and the selling pressure at high levels is accumulating.
Looking at the changes on the capital side is even more interesting. The proportion of large traders' long positions dropped from 65% directly to 52%, while short positions increased from 23% to 36%. The total open interest is also shrinking. This combination usually isn't a shakeout; it more resembles the main force slowly offloading chips at high levels and passing the baton to retail investors.
As for the subsequent development, there are essentially two scenarios—
First, if it can break through 0.404 and stabilize, accompanied by increased volume, it indicates that new funds are willing to enter at higher prices, significantly increasing the probability of pushing upward. But based on the current volume, such a confirmed breakout isn't highly probable.
Second, if it falls below 0.35, it is likely to trigger a surge of stop-loss orders, and the price will then look for support around 0.30 to 0.32. Fortunately, there are some buy orders at the bottom providing support, so the risk of a sharp drop through in the short term isn't high.
The more realistic scenario is that the price continues to fluctuate between 0.35 and 0.40 for a while, fully exchanging chips, and only when volume or news signals provide new momentum will there be a clear direction.
The logic of trading opportunities is also very clear—long positions should wait for a breakout confirmation, short positions should wait for a breakdown confirmation. Until clear signals appear, this market is more about waiting for the direction rather than guessing it.
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MetaverseMigrant
· 8h ago
The main force's handover of chips is really deep; retail investors' lives as bagholders are basically unavoidable.
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NeverVoteOnDAO
· 8h ago
I've heard the explanation of chip handover many times, but can we really trust such weak volume?
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The big players dropped from 65% directly to 52%. This move looks like they are really dumping, but whether retail investors can catch up is another story.
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Be cautious if it breaks below 0.35. If that support line is truly broken, it will be a big deal.
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Wait, is the real manipulation still by the main force? This kind of market is the most annoying.
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No matter how good the explanation, there's no clear direction. I prefer to stay sideways and not chase blindly.
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That 0.404 threshold looks like real pressure. If the volume doesn't pick up, it's just a fake rally. No doubt about that.
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According to this logic, both shorting and longing require confirmation signals. So I'll just stay flat since there's no rush anyway.
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Big players leave, retail investors come in. Isn't this a common tactic to cut the leeks?
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GasGuzzler
· 8h ago
Big players are dumping chips, retail investors are the bagholders, this scheme is full of tricks.
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TeaTimeTrader
· 8h ago
I see through this chip transfer move; the main force is just dumping their positions at high levels, while retail investors are still sleepwalking.
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MetaverseVagabond
· 8h ago
The main force's move is indeed brilliant—publicly raising the price to attract retail investors, while secretly offloading chips behind the scenes, a textbook example of cutting leeks.
Currently, shrinking volume is a signal. Don't follow the trend; wait until a breakdown to act.
PIPPIN has been fluctuating between 0.35 and 0.40 recently, which doesn't seem to indicate an imminent new trend. Instead, it looks like the main force is in the process of transferring positions.
Previously, it rose from 0.26 all the way to 0.404, with a clear rapid and significant upward surge, indicating that funds are "igniting" the market. But at the 0.38 to 0.40 range, things started to change—trading volume decreased, and more upper shadows appeared on the candlesticks. This suggests that the number of follow-buyers is decreasing, and the selling pressure at high levels is accumulating.
Looking at the changes on the capital side is even more interesting. The proportion of large traders' long positions dropped from 65% directly to 52%, while short positions increased from 23% to 36%. The total open interest is also shrinking. This combination usually isn't a shakeout; it more resembles the main force slowly offloading chips at high levels and passing the baton to retail investors.
As for the subsequent development, there are essentially two scenarios—
First, if it can break through 0.404 and stabilize, accompanied by increased volume, it indicates that new funds are willing to enter at higher prices, significantly increasing the probability of pushing upward. But based on the current volume, such a confirmed breakout isn't highly probable.
Second, if it falls below 0.35, it is likely to trigger a surge of stop-loss orders, and the price will then look for support around 0.30 to 0.32. Fortunately, there are some buy orders at the bottom providing support, so the risk of a sharp drop through in the short term isn't high.
The more realistic scenario is that the price continues to fluctuate between 0.35 and 0.40 for a while, fully exchanging chips, and only when volume or news signals provide new momentum will there be a clear direction.
The logic of trading opportunities is also very clear—long positions should wait for a breakout confirmation, short positions should wait for a breakdown confirmation. Until clear signals appear, this market is more about waiting for the direction rather than guessing it.