#美国就业数据表现强劲超出预期 I have opened many short positions on Ripple. When the bull market arrives, the main players start to cash out wildly—that's an iron law.
Honestly, the biggest fear when opening a position isn't the market moving against you, but chaotic logic. Many people don't understand a simple principle— the more positive news there is, the more violent the decline tends to be. Why? Because large investors are unloading their holdings, and they need a sucker to absorb the sell-off and stabilize the price, so they release good news to attract retail investors. This is not conspiracy theory; it's the essence of market participants' game.
Human nature is like this. When everyone is excitedly discussing US non-farm payroll data and improving economic indicators, smart money has already quietly exited. Retail investors see good news and rush in, only to become the last bagholder.
Want to survive longer in the crypto world? Learn to think in reverse: the more positive the bombardment, the more cautious you should be.
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TokenomicsDetective
· 2025-12-21 03:42
Well, I'm tired of this trap theory. Is it really that simple to make money?
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TaxEvader
· 2025-12-18 11:42
Is that all? I've been playing like this for a long time. The more bullish it is, the more I run. Last time XRP surged dramatically, I completely sold off. My friends all scolded me, but guess what? Hey.
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SchrodingersPaper
· 2025-12-18 04:39
Here we go again, the good news is just a signal of selling off, acting like it's real.
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MEVvictim
· 2025-12-18 04:39
I've been playing around with reverse thinking for a long time, but the problem is that knowing and doing are worlds apart.
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LiquidityWitch
· 2025-12-18 04:37
Sigh, the more bullish the news, the more I get hesitant. I didn't fall for it this time.
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AirdropHunterXiao
· 2025-12-18 04:24
The more good news there is, the more you should think in the opposite direction. There's nothing wrong with that... The main players have already smelled it and run away.
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Hash_Bandit
· 2025-12-18 04:19
ngl, seen this playbook a thousand times since the early days. when the noise gets loudest, the smart money's already unplugging their ASICs... or in this case, their bags lmao
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FlatTax
· 2025-12-18 04:18
Positive news causes a sell-off; this tactic is really old, but some people still keep jumping in.
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MercilessHalal
· 2025-12-18 04:18
Haha, I'm about to get trapped again. This non-farm payrolls positive news is truly unbeatable.
#美国就业数据表现强劲超出预期 I have opened many short positions on Ripple. When the bull market arrives, the main players start to cash out wildly—that's an iron law.
Honestly, the biggest fear when opening a position isn't the market moving against you, but chaotic logic. Many people don't understand a simple principle— the more positive news there is, the more violent the decline tends to be. Why? Because large investors are unloading their holdings, and they need a sucker to absorb the sell-off and stabilize the price, so they release good news to attract retail investors. This is not conspiracy theory; it's the essence of market participants' game.
Human nature is like this. When everyone is excitedly discussing US non-farm payroll data and improving economic indicators, smart money has already quietly exited. Retail investors see good news and rush in, only to become the last bagholder.
Want to survive longer in the crypto world? Learn to think in reverse: the more positive the bombardment, the more cautious you should be.
$XRP