Tax loss harvesting season just wrapped up. Here's the thing—once those forced selling pressures ease off, coins tend to bounce back. Is that how it works? Well, historically the pattern holds during this period. Traders lock in losses for tax purposes through year-end, flooding markets with sell orders. Once January hits and that window closes, the artificial selling pressure vanishes. Without that headwind, prices often find breathing room to recover. So the real question isn't whether coins go up—it's how much momentum builds once the seasonal dumping stops. The data tells an interesting story when you zoom out and watch these cycles repeat.
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ImpermanentTherapist
· 4h ago
Basically, it's waiting for those who are cutting leeks to finish their stop-loss so we can finally breathe a sigh of relief.
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TokenCreatorOP
· 4h ago
Hmm, this logic sounds good, but I feel like someone always says this around this time every year...
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PoolJumper
· 4h ago
Here we go again? Every year they say it will rebound after a fall, but what’s the result?
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CommunityLurker
· 4h ago
Wait, is there a problem with this logic? Will the selling pressure from the annual tax settlement really disappear?
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AlwaysAnon
· 4h ago
Damn, it's the same story again. I'm tired of hearing it every year.
Tax loss harvesting season just wrapped up. Here's the thing—once those forced selling pressures ease off, coins tend to bounce back. Is that how it works? Well, historically the pattern holds during this period. Traders lock in losses for tax purposes through year-end, flooding markets with sell orders. Once January hits and that window closes, the artificial selling pressure vanishes. Without that headwind, prices often find breathing room to recover. So the real question isn't whether coins go up—it's how much momentum builds once the seasonal dumping stops. The data tells an interesting story when you zoom out and watch these cycles repeat.