Market participants often display inconsistent logic. When prices fall, they quickly blame manipulation and market rigging. Yet here's the thing—manipulators are just market participants too. If you're calling yourself an analyst, maybe it's time to sharpen your skills instead of making excuses.
On the flip side, when prices surge, suddenly everything's perfect. No bubble concerns anymore, it's the new normal, pure organic growth. The narrative shifts fast: "just keep buying." Same market, same mechanics, completely different interpretations depending on which direction prices move.
The gap between these two extremes reveals something important about market psychology. Solid analysis doesn't change based on whether you're in profit or loss.
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.
12 Likes
Reward
12
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
MagicBean
· 3h ago
Exactly right, that's why most people are like leeks... When it drops, they call it manipulation; when it rises, they're all believers. It's really laughable.
View OriginalReply0
HashRateHermit
· 3h ago
Really, all these explanations are just nonsense. When it drops, they shout "dump," when it rises, they boast about a new paradigm. It's hilarious.
View OriginalReply0
CryptoHistoryClass
· 3h ago
ngl this is just 2017-2021 playbook playing on repeat. tulip mania had better excuses tbh
Reply0
SmartMoneyWallet
· 3h ago
It's just that the chip distribution isn't fully understood, yet you blame the trader. You can't even understand the technical aspects but still want to shift the blame.
Market participants often display inconsistent logic. When prices fall, they quickly blame manipulation and market rigging. Yet here's the thing—manipulators are just market participants too. If you're calling yourself an analyst, maybe it's time to sharpen your skills instead of making excuses.
On the flip side, when prices surge, suddenly everything's perfect. No bubble concerns anymore, it's the new normal, pure organic growth. The narrative shifts fast: "just keep buying." Same market, same mechanics, completely different interpretations depending on which direction prices move.
The gap between these two extremes reveals something important about market psychology. Solid analysis doesn't change based on whether you're in profit or loss.