Recently, ZEC has shown interesting on-chain activity. A large holder transferred approximately $100 million worth of funds through ZEC's stealth address pool, directly impacting market fluctuations—during this period, ZEC has been oscillating around $50, with the behind-the-scenes driver being this large stealth transfer.
From on-chain data, the total amount in the ZEC stealth pool has shown a significant change. The current stealth transaction volume has dropped to 4,858,645.11826483 ZEC, a decrease of 202,076.60745000 ZEC compared to the previous period. Such a large outflow usually indicates that whales are adjusting their positions or transferring funds. The mechanism of the stealth pool itself is designed for large holders, capable of masking true transaction intentions, so whenever such abnormal fluctuations occur, market participants' real intentions can often be detected.
It is worth noting that although these stealth transactions can evade tracking, the total transaction volume still leaves traces on the chain. For ZEC traders, monitoring changes in the shielded pool data can help better understand the logic behind large holders' short-term movements.
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POAPlectionist
· 01-03 17:01
Whales are back to playing the hidden pool game again, no wonder ZEC has been going crazy these days.
Another 100 million trick, truly impressive.
With the shielded pool data dropping so much, is this time to pump or dump?
Monitoring this thing is much more useful than looking at candlestick charts, just watch the whale movements.
ZEC's privacy transaction rules are truly tailored for big players.
Fluctuating around $50, just waiting to see what happens next.
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MagicBean
· 01-03 02:55
Whales are causing trouble again, smashing the market back and forth with 50 blocks. So annoying.
Whenever the data on ZEC's hidden pools fluctuates, I know big players are up to no good.
One hundred million dollars... That's my salary this month.
On-chain traces can't be hidden; anyone with a keen eye can see through them.
Those monitoring this data have already posted about it, so why am I still losing?
Hidden addresses, to put it simply, are tools for big players to harvest profits.
Position adjustments? Isn't that just the same as smashing the market to absorb liquidity?
ZEC is quite interesting; whales treat it like a toy.
Wait a bit before entering again... this rhythm is too strange.
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CryptoNomics
· 01-03 02:54
honestly the shielded pool mechanics here are just *chef's kiss* for catching whale behavior. that 202k zec outflow? statistically significant if you actually run the regression analysis on historical volatility patterns. most traders miss this entirely because they're too busy drawing triangles on charts lmao
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BearMarketGardener
· 01-03 02:52
Whales are playing hide-and-seek pools, while we're here guessing...
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Another $100 million trick, ZEC's move is quite interesting
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On-chain traces can fool no one, it all still depends on guessing
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So much flow out of the hide-and-seek pool, the true intention has long been written in the data
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Fluctuating around $50, behind it are these big players waving swords and guns
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What’s the use of monitoring the shielded pool? By the time you react, it’s already been harvested
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Over 200,000 ZEC flowing out, isn’t this a whale clearing signal?
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Hidden transactions can evade tracking, but they can't escape the "Sky Eye" on the chain
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ZEC’s tactics are quite deep, ordinary retail investors simply can't keep up with this pace
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeBeggar
· 01-03 02:51
Whales are playing hide-and-seek with the hidden pool again, no wonder ZEC has been relatively calm these past two days.
A transfer of one hundred million dollars is so large, and they still want to hide in concealed addresses? On-chain data has fully exposed you.
ZEC was originally designed as a privacy coin, but it has instead become a "manipulation tool" for big players.
Repeated fluctuations around $50, essentially eating retail investors' stop-loss orders.
Monitoring hidden pool data does have its tricks, but the problem is that the data we small investors can see is always delayed; the whales have already run away.
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OffchainOracle
· 01-03 02:51
Whales are playing hide and seek, so let's just watch the on-chain data and enjoy the show.
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NFTragedy
· 01-03 02:44
Whale tactics are back again. The recent ZEC fluctuation is basically big players shaking out their positions.
Even hidden pools are showing massive outflows. Don't you see? This is distribution.
A billion-dollar move—small investors really can't play.
On-chain data is all there. If you can't see it, you're blind.
ZEC's covert design is truly brilliant—big players' paradise.
Monitoring and blocking pool data—what's the use? By the time people react, they've already left.
Repeated fluctuations around $50—classic sell-off signals.
Whales are withdrawing. Can it still go up afterward? That's questionable.
This is real on-chain game theory. Retail investors are just the chives.
Recently, ZEC has shown interesting on-chain activity. A large holder transferred approximately $100 million worth of funds through ZEC's stealth address pool, directly impacting market fluctuations—during this period, ZEC has been oscillating around $50, with the behind-the-scenes driver being this large stealth transfer.
From on-chain data, the total amount in the ZEC stealth pool has shown a significant change. The current stealth transaction volume has dropped to 4,858,645.11826483 ZEC, a decrease of 202,076.60745000 ZEC compared to the previous period. Such a large outflow usually indicates that whales are adjusting their positions or transferring funds. The mechanism of the stealth pool itself is designed for large holders, capable of masking true transaction intentions, so whenever such abnormal fluctuations occur, market participants' real intentions can often be detected.
It is worth noting that although these stealth transactions can evade tracking, the total transaction volume still leaves traces on the chain. For ZEC traders, monitoring changes in the shielded pool data can help better understand the logic behind large holders' short-term movements.