When it comes to the Harvest Finance token, people are currently 'buying the dip' mainly due to a combination of several factors:
* small circulating supply — there are relatively few coins;
* low liquidity — price can move sharply even on medium volumes;
* after delisting news, strong volatility often arises;
* Many short sellers open their positions in advance, expecting a drop;
* During a sharp pump, a short squeeze begins: shorts are liquidated, and their closure turns into market buys.
The mechanics of a squeeze look like this:
1. The crowd opens shorts.
2. Someone starts aggressively buying the order book.
3. The price rises sharply.
4. The exchange forcibly closes some shorts.
5. Closing a short equals buying the coin at market.
6. This drives the price up even further.
Because of this, similar coins can experience movements:
* +50-100% in a day;
* Sometimes multiple times in a short period;
* Especially if liquidity is thin and supply is small.
But there's another side:
* After a squeeze, the price can crash just as quickly;
* Liquidity tends to disappear over time during delistings;
* A big holder can suddenly dump a large volume;
* Spreads and slippage become enormous.
So the idea of 'buying back FARM' from speculators is based not on fundamentals, but on:
* Coin shortages,
* Panic among short sellers,
* low liquidity,
* potential for a squeeze.
This is a very high-risk trade, not a calm investment.$FARM 

