Looking at recent public opinion, it seems everyone is saying that the market has stabilized and is about to rebound. But if you carefully analyze the sentiment and capital flow, you'll find that the market is actually still hesitating.
Bitcoin is a typical example. The price hasn't shown obvious downward pressure, but every rebound needs to be repeatedly verified; the decline isn't large, yet it always manages to shake out retail investors trying to bottom fish. This doesn't look like a strong trend at all, but rather like big funds cautiously probing each other at high levels. The actual amount of chips continuously adding positions isn't that much.
Hot news can give the market a temporary boost, but the excitement comes quickly and goes just as fast. Trading volume is the true touchstone. If volume can't keep up, these bursts of enthusiasm only stay in group chats and posts, and can't translate into price increases. That's why recent market movements are stuck at this strange point of "seems like it wants to move but hasn't moved."
On the Ethereum side, the disagreement is even more painful. Bulls emphasize fundamentals and ecosystem stories, while bears focus on short-term patterns and capital efficiency. Both sides' logic isn't wrong; the trouble is—short-term prices are dictated by capital, not faith. Overall risk appetite hasn't significantly increased, making it difficult for ETH to move independently of the broader market.
Many people are falling into a trap now, mistaking "not falling" for "about to rise." The real situation is that a sideways market is best at wearing people down, making both bulls and bears feel uncomfortable. In such an environment, chasing the trend is prohibitively costly. Opportunities do exist, but they require more patience and careful selection.
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SerNgmi
· 23h ago
Another round of "no drop, just rise" self-congratulation, it's getting a bit tiring to watch.
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CountdownToBroke
· 23h ago
It's the same story again. The bullish always wait for a rebound, the bearish always wait for a collapse, and retail investors get caught in these two extremes.
The point about trading volume is true—no volume means a false market. No matter how many hot topics there are, it's all pointless.
Bitcoin's repeatedly verified trend is just big players testing the waters. Sooner or later, those following the trend will get kicked out.
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NoStopLossNut
· 23h ago
If you can't increase the volume, there's no point in bragging; it's all self-deception.
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LiquidationOracle
· 23h ago
No matter the hype, it's all just paper tigers. Honestly, big funds just haven't made up their minds yet.
Looking at recent public opinion, it seems everyone is saying that the market has stabilized and is about to rebound. But if you carefully analyze the sentiment and capital flow, you'll find that the market is actually still hesitating.
Bitcoin is a typical example. The price hasn't shown obvious downward pressure, but every rebound needs to be repeatedly verified; the decline isn't large, yet it always manages to shake out retail investors trying to bottom fish. This doesn't look like a strong trend at all, but rather like big funds cautiously probing each other at high levels. The actual amount of chips continuously adding positions isn't that much.
Hot news can give the market a temporary boost, but the excitement comes quickly and goes just as fast. Trading volume is the true touchstone. If volume can't keep up, these bursts of enthusiasm only stay in group chats and posts, and can't translate into price increases. That's why recent market movements are stuck at this strange point of "seems like it wants to move but hasn't moved."
On the Ethereum side, the disagreement is even more painful. Bulls emphasize fundamentals and ecosystem stories, while bears focus on short-term patterns and capital efficiency. Both sides' logic isn't wrong; the trouble is—short-term prices are dictated by capital, not faith. Overall risk appetite hasn't significantly increased, making it difficult for ETH to move independently of the broader market.
Many people are falling into a trap now, mistaking "not falling" for "about to rise." The real situation is that a sideways market is best at wearing people down, making both bulls and bears feel uncomfortable. In such an environment, chasing the trend is prohibitively costly. Opportunities do exist, but they require more patience and careful selection.