Here's something even more interesting: two wallet addresses were frantically buying before and after the price surge, purchasing a total of $1.5 million worth of PIPPIN. One address now holds $4.47 million worth of PIPPIN, and the other has accumulated $636,000.
This kind of operation is common in the crypto space. Whales quietly build their positions, pump the price, and when retail investors rush in, they may already be selling off in batches. On-chain data doesn't lie, but interpreting it takes experience.
How should retail investors respond?
First, don't let a surge cloud your judgment. FOMO((Fear of Missing Out)) is the most expensive emotion in crypto. You need to learn to track on-chain data and watch the movements of these large addresses—there's no need to follow them immediately when they buy, but if you see them starting to transfer out tokens in batches, it's time to be cautious.
In the crypto market, the information gap and cognitive gap determine most people's wins and losses. When you see a coin soaring, calmly ask yourself three questions: Who is driving this rally? What is their goal? If I enter now, am I investing or just being the exit liquidity?
Remember this: It's very hard to make money beyond your own level of understanding. Even if the opportunity is right in front of you, without good judgment, you might just be handing your money to someone else.
There are no gods in crypto, only people who get information earlier and understand how to interpret data better.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
6 Likes
Reward
6
3
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
YieldHunter
· 5h ago
honestly if you look at the data... that $4.47m wallet screams distribution cycle. seen this play before, technically speaking it's textbook pump mechanics. ngl the degens are about to get liquidated lol
Reply0
DegenWhisperer
· 12h ago
Here we go again, the same old trick of big players cutting off retail investors.
View OriginalReply0
ShibaSunglasses
· 12h ago
It's the same old pump-and-dump scheme, I've seen through it.
PIPPIN went up 80% yesterday, did you see it?
Here's something even more interesting: two wallet addresses were frantically buying before and after the price surge, purchasing a total of $1.5 million worth of PIPPIN. One address now holds $4.47 million worth of PIPPIN, and the other has accumulated $636,000.
This kind of operation is common in the crypto space. Whales quietly build their positions, pump the price, and when retail investors rush in, they may already be selling off in batches. On-chain data doesn't lie, but interpreting it takes experience.
How should retail investors respond?
First, don't let a surge cloud your judgment. FOMO((Fear of Missing Out)) is the most expensive emotion in crypto. You need to learn to track on-chain data and watch the movements of these large addresses—there's no need to follow them immediately when they buy, but if you see them starting to transfer out tokens in batches, it's time to be cautious.
In the crypto market, the information gap and cognitive gap determine most people's wins and losses. When you see a coin soaring, calmly ask yourself three questions: Who is driving this rally? What is their goal? If I enter now, am I investing or just being the exit liquidity?
Remember this: It's very hard to make money beyond your own level of understanding. Even if the opportunity is right in front of you, without good judgment, you might just be handing your money to someone else.
There are no gods in crypto, only people who get information earlier and understand how to interpret data better.