But that also changes how you should look at this cycle right now.
👉 RETAIL NEVER REACHED “TOO MANY” LEVELS THIS TIME
Look back at 2017 and 2021 on the chart. Retail activity spiked aggressively near cycle tops, with clusters of red dots showing too many participants chasing price at the same time. That was emotional money. Fast money. Late money.
Now compare that to 2024.
Even during strong rallies, retail activity barely moved into the “many retail” zone and quickly cooled off. There was no sustained frenzy. No prolonged euphoric phase. Just short bursts of participation followed by silence.
That’s not how tops are built.
That’s how markets behave when retail is still skeptical, underinvested, or simply distracted elsewhere.
👉 DECEMBER 2024 WAS NOT A RETAIL MOVE
This is where a lot of people get confused.
December 2024 looked strong on price, but the chart shows that retail participation didn’t spike the way it historically does during speculative blow-offs. Instead, price moved while retail activity stayed relatively calm.
That’s a big tell.
It suggests that momentum was driven more by institutional flows, structured buying, and long-term positioning rather than emotional retail chasing green candles.
ETFs, funds, and larger players don’t leave the same footprint as retail, and this chart reflects that difference clearly.
Retail wasn’t pushing the market higher. It was reacting slowly, if at all.
👉 WHY THIS MATTERS GOING FORWARD
Markets usually end when retail is fully involved, loud, confident, and overexposed.
We’re not there.
Right now, this looks more like a market still climbing a wall of disbelief, where price advances without broad participation and sentiment stays cautious even after strong moves.
That doesn’t guarantee higher prices tomorrow. But it strongly suggests that this cycle hasn’t reached the psychological phase where excess gets punished.
Retail hasn’t arrived yet.
And historically, the biggest moves happen after they do, not before.
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YOUR FRUSTRATION IS JUSTIFIED 😠
> Gold hitting ATHs
> Silver hitting ATHs
> Stocks hitting ATHs
> Bitcoin in correction
> Altseason is no where
Retail is not looking at crypto right now.
But that also changes how you should look at this cycle right now.
👉 RETAIL NEVER REACHED “TOO MANY” LEVELS THIS TIME
Look back at 2017 and 2021 on the chart. Retail activity spiked aggressively near cycle tops, with clusters of red dots showing too many participants chasing price at the same time. That was emotional money. Fast money. Late money.
Now compare that to 2024.
Even during strong rallies, retail activity barely moved into the “many retail” zone and quickly cooled off. There was no sustained frenzy. No prolonged euphoric phase. Just short bursts of participation followed by silence.
That’s not how tops are built.
That’s how markets behave when retail is still skeptical, underinvested, or simply distracted elsewhere.
👉 DECEMBER 2024 WAS NOT A RETAIL MOVE
This is where a lot of people get confused.
December 2024 looked strong on price, but the chart shows that retail participation didn’t spike the way it historically does during speculative blow-offs. Instead, price moved while retail activity stayed relatively calm.
That’s a big tell.
It suggests that momentum was driven more by institutional flows, structured buying, and long-term positioning rather than emotional retail chasing green candles.
ETFs, funds, and larger players don’t leave the same footprint as retail, and this chart reflects that difference clearly.
Retail wasn’t pushing the market higher. It was reacting slowly, if at all.
👉 WHY THIS MATTERS GOING FORWARD
Markets usually end when retail is fully involved, loud, confident, and overexposed.
We’re not there.
Right now, this looks more like a market still climbing a wall of disbelief, where price advances without broad participation and sentiment stays cautious even after strong moves.
That doesn’t guarantee higher prices tomorrow. But it strongly suggests that this cycle hasn’t reached the psychological phase where excess gets punished.
Retail hasn’t arrived yet.
And historically, the biggest moves happen after they do, not before.