Have you looked at the trend charts of many new projects? It's basically the same pattern—unless your project valuation breaks through $100 million, the chart will look like this.
The logic behind this is actually quite harsh: early-stage projects have poor liquidity and volatile prices. Once funds flow in and out, the K-line chart looks like a roller coaster. Not convinced? Just browse through projects still hovering around a million-dollar valuation, and you'll find their charts all share this characteristic—sharp rises and falls, with no规律可言.
That's why investors are all chasing projects with higher valuations and larger market caps. Big projects have deep liquidity support, making their prices more stable. No matter how promising small projects are, just looking at the chart is enough to discourage investment.
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TaxEvader
· 11h ago
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bridge_anxiety
· 11h ago
Really, early project candlesticks are just gambling machines. I've seen too many people discouraged by charts.
Hmm... actually, liquidity is the key. No matter how promising small projects are, it's useless.
Charts of projects valued at millions can ruin people's mindset. Why bother?
So, it's better to play those with depth and solid foundations.
That's why big investors prefer large projects. Charts speak louder.
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SigmaValidator
· 11h ago
Really, just a glance at the charts of small coins makes me want to complain; they all smell like scams.
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NotSatoshi
· 11h ago
Early project charts are just a joke, a Spider-Man pointing at Spider-Man kind of feeling haha
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Basically, liquidity is everything. If no one takes the other side, it has to die
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Million-dollar projects dare to look at charts? I’d close my eyes directly
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That’s why I only copy the big market; small coin K-lines are basically works of art
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That’s a punch to the gut. I’ve bought three small projects before, and their charts are like roller coasters. Now I only trust big liquidity
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So the bottom line is a $100 million valuation? Still feels conservative
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Have you seen those million-dollar projects? It’s really outrageous, with sharp rises and falls like gambling
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OneBlockAtATime
· 11h ago
To be honest, watching charts of million-dollar projects gives me a headache—it's truly casino-level volatility.
Even promising small coins can't withstand this rollercoaster; it's better to wait until they mature before jumping in.
Poor liquidity is the original sin; a small fluctuation in funds can cause several times the rise or fall. How to play?
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ZenMiner
· 11h ago
Million-dollar small projects look daunting; who dares to go all-in?
Have you looked at the trend charts of many new projects? It's basically the same pattern—unless your project valuation breaks through $100 million, the chart will look like this.
The logic behind this is actually quite harsh: early-stage projects have poor liquidity and volatile prices. Once funds flow in and out, the K-line chart looks like a roller coaster. Not convinced? Just browse through projects still hovering around a million-dollar valuation, and you'll find their charts all share this characteristic—sharp rises and falls, with no规律可言.
That's why investors are all chasing projects with higher valuations and larger market caps. Big projects have deep liquidity support, making their prices more stable. No matter how promising small projects are, just looking at the chart is enough to discourage investment.