The dealer's wash is really not aimed at your little U$pippin
After ten years of struggling in the cryptocurrency world, I've seen retail investors curse when the price drops, saying, "The dealer is targeting my chips."
The truth is that the dealer's wash is never to snatch your coins, but rather to pave the way for a higher future rally and more stable exits.
I once witnessed the operation of a small coin, let's call it coin M.
Initial price 1.2U, circulation 10 million pieces, with retail investors holding 60%.
A team bought 4 million pieces at the bottom but didn't dare to push it directly — if they forcibly raised it to 1.5U, when the early retail investors started to sell, the team couldn't handle it, and in the end, no one would lift the sedan chair.
Their wash plan is very systematic. First, there is a silent decline with no volume, and the coin price slowly drops from 1.2U to 0.9U, with no volume and no news. Retail investors began to panic: "Is it going to crash?" "Don't go to zero, hurry and run," many sold at a loss, while the dealer quietly took over around 0.9U.
Next came a sharp drop and rebound, with the coin price suddenly spiking to 0.7U and then quickly pulling back to 0.95U. Many thought they had hit the bottom and rushed in to buy, only for the dealer to smash the price below the previous low to 0.65U, burying all the bottom buyers, and they could only sell at a loss as their mindset collapsed.
In the final stage, accompanied by FUD news like "the project party withdrawing liquidity" and "big investors fleeing," the coin price dropped all the way to 0.5U. The market was in despair, retail investors were clearing their positions in hopelessness, while the dealer was accumulating a large number of chips in this range.
Once they had enough chips, the dealer used a small amount of funds to pull the coin price back to 1U, emerging from the "golden pit." Those who sold at a loss before dared not chase, and the cost for new entrants was around 1U.
After this round of cleansing, the dealer's chips increased from 4 million to 6 million pieces, with an even lower average price. The key point is that the weak floating chips are gone, making it very light for the subsequent rally.
So next time you encounter a crash, don't just curse the dealer.
If you understand this, you will know that this is not the end; it is the dealer preparing for the rally.
In the past, I stumbled around in the dark of the crypto world, but now I've figured out the way. I hold this "light"; do you want to follow? @juice实盘带单 #庄家



