COAI, AIA, MYX, and RIVER are four secondary markets with highly speculative coins that may not align with the majority's judgment of value investing. However, there aren't many coins in the crypto world that are truly worth value investing, so here are a few thoughts:

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1. High concentration of chips = High control by the market maker

Do you think chip concentration is a bad thing? That may be true for those who want to hold long-term for value investing.

But for those who engage in speculation, chip concentration is simply a great thing!

For coins with dispersed chips, if you pull up 10%, there are 1000 retail investors waiting to sell. For coins with concentrated chips, the market maker can easily maneuver between positions, guiding the market as they wish and can always go to the moon.

When the market maker wants to push the price up, do they need to worry about retail investors selling against them? No, they don't. The only concern is other large whales. Typically, these new coins are deeply tied to the market makers and exchanges, with very few chips available outside.

In this case, the market maker is the only short seller. As long as they don't sell, the coin can soar to the moon. What we are betting on is whether the market maker wants us to make money.

2. No or few airdrops = No free riders selling off

Not issuing airdrops means that everyone on board has spent money. This achieves a uniform cost basis, and everyone’s cost is similar (except for the market maker themselves), eliminating any selling pressure from zero-cost holders, making all calculations predictable.

Without airdrops, every seller in the market is either cutting losses or taking profits. This makes the candlestick chart very authentic, allowing the market maker to easily gauge retail investors' psychology, making it light in the market and easier to push up.

3. Only list on Binance Alpha/Contracts, accumulate opposing positions

This is the essence of the essence!

Do you think only listing contracts is a bad thing? NONONO! Have you considered that this is orchestrating a scheme? Contracts do not focus on chips but rather on capital strength. The market maker controls 90% of the spot market, and with the double insurance of contracts, they can always keep the token price in their hands.