Recently, PEPE's performance has indeed attracted a lot of attention. In just a few days, the price has surged nearly 40% from the bottom. Such a strong rally is usually only seen during the altcoin season.
But don't rush to be overly bullish. Anyone involved in the crypto market knows that the most dangerous moments are often when a big bullish candle appears. A single K-line can change beliefs, and that's the riskiest.
Carefully observing this wave of upward movement, there's a very noticeable phenomenon—the manipulation tactics are very obvious. Looking at the order book, large orders are being matched against each other, with order suppression and support, and the entire operation logic is very clear. This is clearly not the result of retail investors' natural movement; there must be major funds behind it.
Based on current signs, the intentions of these major players are gradually becoming apparent. They are testing the market, looking for a breakout opportunity, which industry insiders call "bottom exploration."
The key question is: is this a real breakout or a false one?
If it's a substantial breakout, there could be significant room for further growth. But if it's just a rebound trap, then it's a classic "lure the tiger out of the mountain" pattern, with high risk.
To determine which is which, we need to look at the sustainability. The size of the increase isn't the main point; the key is whether the price can stay high for three consecutive days without falling back. As long as this happens, the current trend can be considered confirmed. Conversely, if trading volume diminishes and prices start to pull back tomorrow, it's most likely just a normal correction of an oversold rebound.
Trading suggestion: those holding positions can continue to hold, but must set stop-loss and take-profit points to manage risk. Investors still on the sidelines should avoid chasing highs now; wait until the price retraces and confirms support levels before considering entering.
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WalletDetective
· 2h ago
The main force's tactics are too obvious, I'm embarrassed for them. Do they really think they can fool retail investors into entering the market with this?
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BrokeBeans
· 6h ago
Here we go again? If it stays high for three days, I'll eat shit.
View OriginalReply0
NotSatoshi
· 6h ago
The main force is front-running so obviously, are retail investors still chasing? Wake up, brothers.
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ProxyCollector
· 6h ago
The main force is testing the market, retail investors are still chasing highs. How many times have we seen this routine?
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Only if it stands firm for three days can it be considered a real breakout; otherwise, it's the classic "pig slaughter scheme."
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Such obvious large order counter-trading, and some still can't see that there's manipulation behind it. I'm stunned.
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Don't be fooled by the 40% increase; the rebound trap is the real killer.
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Wait a bit. Isn't it better to buy after it retests? Why chase high and send money away?
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Set a stop-loss. Really, there are many instances where a single K-line changes beliefs.
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When trading volume shrinks, start running. Don't think about bottom-fishing.
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If this wave truly breaks through, there is indeed room for imagination, but the key is sustainability.
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Retail investors naturally can't push this kind of increase; the main force's intentions are gradually becoming clear. Let's see their attitude next.
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It's not about saying don't look bullish, but about not being fooled. You need to wait for confirmation signals.
View OriginalReply0
HashRatePhilosopher
· 7h ago
The main force is testing the market, retail investors are taking the bait. I've heard this story too many times.
Fake breakout, real breakout—wait three days to see the outcome; otherwise, it's just a harvest for the chives.
Take profit and stop loss are a must, or one K-line will get you fully wrecked.
This wave of market feels like a honey trap. Let's just watch from the side, don't rush.
Unable to hold high for three consecutive days? That's a fakeout, run.
View OriginalReply0
HallucinationGrower
· 7h ago
It's the same old trick again, with the main players testing the market and luring others into a trap, hearing it so often that my ears are getting calloused.
Standing firm for three consecutive days? I bet five bucks it'll plunge tomorrow.
Recently, PEPE's performance has indeed attracted a lot of attention. In just a few days, the price has surged nearly 40% from the bottom. Such a strong rally is usually only seen during the altcoin season.
But don't rush to be overly bullish. Anyone involved in the crypto market knows that the most dangerous moments are often when a big bullish candle appears. A single K-line can change beliefs, and that's the riskiest.
Carefully observing this wave of upward movement, there's a very noticeable phenomenon—the manipulation tactics are very obvious. Looking at the order book, large orders are being matched against each other, with order suppression and support, and the entire operation logic is very clear. This is clearly not the result of retail investors' natural movement; there must be major funds behind it.
Based on current signs, the intentions of these major players are gradually becoming apparent. They are testing the market, looking for a breakout opportunity, which industry insiders call "bottom exploration."
The key question is: is this a real breakout or a false one?
If it's a substantial breakout, there could be significant room for further growth. But if it's just a rebound trap, then it's a classic "lure the tiger out of the mountain" pattern, with high risk.
To determine which is which, we need to look at the sustainability. The size of the increase isn't the main point; the key is whether the price can stay high for three consecutive days without falling back. As long as this happens, the current trend can be considered confirmed. Conversely, if trading volume diminishes and prices start to pull back tomorrow, it's most likely just a normal correction of an oversold rebound.
Trading suggestion: those holding positions can continue to hold, but must set stop-loss and take-profit points to manage risk. Investors still on the sidelines should avoid chasing highs now; wait until the price retraces and confirms support levels before considering entering.