$GENIUS There’s something interesting happening with @GeniusOfficial Terminal right now that a lot of traders are quietly noticing.
Whenever big news drops, the reaction in price isn’t smooth or stable. Instead, it tends to snap sharply in both directions. In some cases, we’re seeing around 25% swings shortly after announcements.
On paper, news is supposed to bring clarity. In reality, it often does the opposite in early-stage tokens. The information hits the market, but instead of a steady repricing, liquidity reacts first, and conviction comes later.$Jager
So what you get is a very familiar pattern:
News drops
Traders rush in or out
Liquidity thins out on one side
Price overreacts
Then slowly stabilizes after the initial shock
It’s not necessarily about the news being good or bad. It’s more about how early the market still is, and how quickly positioning shifts when sentiment changes.$ALLO
For active traders, this kind of environment is less about “long-term interpretation” and more about timing, execution, and risk control. Because in these conditions, the move after the news often matters more than the news itself.
Volatility like this usually doesn’t stay forever but while it exists, it defines how the market behaves.
