Several inconspicuous but very accurate details of liquidity regression:

The market has shown obvious bearish signals (regulation, poor data, institutional failures), and as a result, prices only fell symbolically for a moment before being pulled back up.

This indicates that the bears have run out of steam; those who needed to cut losses have done so, leaving only the stubborn bulls—no one is selling regardless of what happens.

OTC premiums have started to quietly rise.

Veteran traders understand: when the U price moves first and the market hasn’t moved, it means more money is coming in and less is going out, and buying pressure is secretly strengthening.

Junk coins and memes have suddenly started to spike, and the feeling of missing out is beginning to soar.

A typical feature of liquidity regression is: funds start to become arrogant while people become cautious. When retail investors miss out, their eyes immediately turn to those assets that haven’t moved much but have large fluctuations.

The direction of exchange pinning has changed.

In a bear market, pinning is done upwards to collect longs; however, before a bull market, it often inexplicably pins down to wash out leverage, and this happens without any bearish news.