In just one week, 30 million disappeared like that. Looking at it from another perspective, that's enough to burn the money for a new Porsche every two hours. This wealth would take ordinary people over 2,000 years of work without eating or drinking to accumulate, yet it was wiped out completely in just 7 days.
Such a level of loss can always trigger various interpretations in the market. Some traders believe this was a deliberate market dump by a major whale—selling enough chips to create panic, using the 30 million loss as fuel, and laying the groundwork for the upcoming surge or crash. This is called killing long and short positions, aiming to clear out retail traders' floating positions.
Other analysts point to those large market participants. They believe this could be a major holder adjusting their positions—what appears to be a loss is actually a market-driven reallocation of chips. A game of left hand giving to the right hand, superficially exposing risk but secretly exchanging positions skillfully.
BTC's performance over these 7 days has indeed been somewhat outrageous. But every time such intense volatility occurs, the real winners are often not the retail traders betting on the right direction, but the big players who understand the market rhythm and control information advantages.
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GhostAddressMiner
· 10h ago
30 million gone? I've had my eye on that wallet for a long time, the on-chain footprint is incredibly clear.
Bet on the right direction? Laughing out loud, retail investors are always the last to know.
This money didn't disappear; it quietly flowed into some addresses you can't see.
Whales are killing off positions, playing a game that retail chives like us can't see through.
Recently active dormant wallets, you really should check out what the original addresses are doing.
Every time there's such a sharp drop, I can track the fund migration trajectory, and this time is no exception.
So where did that 30 million actually go? Let's look at the on-chain data together and let it do the talking.
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RugPullAlertBot
· 10h ago
Is this the same old story of one hand doing one thing and the other hand doing the opposite? Honestly, it's just the market makers finding a new excuse to harvest retail investors. We retail investors are really only fit to be harvested.
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MondayYoloFridayCry
· 10h ago
Here comes the same old trick of cutting leeks again. 30 million is just a left hand to right hand for big players, and retail investors like us are left with nothing but tattered underwear.
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ForkTongue
· 10h ago
Here we go again with the same old story, big players dumping and clearing out chips... I've gotten so used to it my ears are calloused. Honestly, we're just leeks; they play with 30 million as if it's nothing, while our hard-earned money instantly vanishes.
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Retail investors really deserve to be harvested; this market is just a game of big fish eating small fish.
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Left hand to right hand? I think these big players are quite skilled at playing the game; anyway, they're not losing their own money.
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Every time there's a sharp drop, it's said to be dumping and clearing out. What about when it rises? Can't this logic be more consistent?
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30 million is gone just like that. My monthly salary is less than one-tenth of that... Forget it, I don't want to think about it anymore, it's too heartbreaking.
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The real big players who understand the rhythm have already cashed out; we're still here guessing the intentions of the big players.
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Burning 30 million a week, how ruthless must one be to hold on? We can't even sleep when we lose one percent of our principal.
In just one week, 30 million disappeared like that. Looking at it from another perspective, that's enough to burn the money for a new Porsche every two hours. This wealth would take ordinary people over 2,000 years of work without eating or drinking to accumulate, yet it was wiped out completely in just 7 days.
Such a level of loss can always trigger various interpretations in the market. Some traders believe this was a deliberate market dump by a major whale—selling enough chips to create panic, using the 30 million loss as fuel, and laying the groundwork for the upcoming surge or crash. This is called killing long and short positions, aiming to clear out retail traders' floating positions.
Other analysts point to those large market participants. They believe this could be a major holder adjusting their positions—what appears to be a loss is actually a market-driven reallocation of chips. A game of left hand giving to the right hand, superficially exposing risk but secretly exchanging positions skillfully.
BTC's performance over these 7 days has indeed been somewhat outrageous. But every time such intense volatility occurs, the real winners are often not the retail traders betting on the right direction, but the big players who understand the market rhythm and control information advantages.