Market volatility doing its job—shaking out the weak hands. When prices drop sharply, retail investors panic-sell while institutional players quietly accumulate. This natural cleansing cycle separates conviction holders from those just chasing quick gains. Every major bull run is preceded by this exact pattern: fear, capitulation, then recovery. The question isn't whether it happens, but whether you're ready for it.
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DAOTruant
· 4h ago
I once again disagree with the idea that market fluctuations are just natural cleansing; saying that institutions are accumulating shares is too absolute.
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BlockImposter
· 01-09 21:10
What are you panicking about? This is just about filtering out who truly believes and who is gambling.
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GamefiEscapeArtist
· 01-07 22:06
Here we go again, every time it drops, they say it's "sweeping out weak hands." I'm tired of hearing it.
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LiquidationTherapist
· 01-07 22:06
Those who bought the dip are already making a fortune, while those panic-selling are still crying.
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MerkleTreeHugger
· 01-07 21:57
ngl, while institutions are bottom-fishing, we're still cutting losses. The gap is really huge.
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WhaleMistaker
· 01-07 21:54
I've been through it myself; every time I'm shaken out, I watch the big players eat up the gains with my own eyes.
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GasFeeDodger
· 01-07 21:42
Bottom-fishing time, let's see who can hold out until the end...
Market volatility doing its job—shaking out the weak hands. When prices drop sharply, retail investors panic-sell while institutional players quietly accumulate. This natural cleansing cycle separates conviction holders from those just chasing quick gains. Every major bull run is preceded by this exact pattern: fear, capitulation, then recovery. The question isn't whether it happens, but whether you're ready for it.