Last night, AAVE had a wave of sell orders at the secondary position, and the market sentiment instantly exploded. This round of selling was quite fierce, and the overall market data's rise has become a bit weak, with the following order book clearly sluggish.
Regarding the recent governance turmoil, I personally feel that this will not affect the essence of the project. Aave's position in the lending sector is quite clear, with a monopoly advantage that is quite obvious—Active loans account for more than 60%, and this data clearly shows market recognition. Short-term emotional fluctuations cannot change the long-term pattern. Technical and fundamental aspects should still be viewed separately; panic selling is often an opportunity.
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MEVictim
· 52m ago
The selling pressure is so fierce, it just shows that big players are once again harvesting the little guys. My holdings have shrunk again.
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TokenToaster
· 13h ago
Large Investors dump, so what? After all, AAVE's monopoly position can't run away, with 60% of active loans sitting there. In fact, I want to buy the dip for the short-term panic selling.
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TestnetScholar
· 12-22 15:44
No matter how fierce the sell orders are, it's useless; the fundamentals are there. A 60% share is not something to be taken lightly, panic selling has to enter a position.
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MetaverseLandlord
· 12-22 15:43
It's normal for Large Investors to dump, just a Whipsaw, don't panic.
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SmartContractPlumber
· 12-22 15:40
To be honest, the sell-off is fierce, but with 60% of active loans accounted for, what’s there to panic about—this data itself is the strongest firewall. I've seen too many governance disputes; what we really need to look at is whether there are issues with permission control and whether the contract upgrade mechanism is rigorous, these are the real issues. Short-term panic selling is indeed an opportunity; it just depends on whether you dare to seize it.
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MergeConflict
· 12-22 15:30
That's how the celebrity dumps their assets, scaring a group of retail investors into following suit and dumping, which is truly ridiculous.
Panic aside, with a 60% loan-to-value ratio in place, this moat can't be shaken by anyone.
What’s the fuss about governance issues? As long as the fundamentals remain, it’s still stable.
Last night, AAVE had a wave of sell orders at the secondary position, and the market sentiment instantly exploded. This round of selling was quite fierce, and the overall market data's rise has become a bit weak, with the following order book clearly sluggish.
Regarding the recent governance turmoil, I personally feel that this will not affect the essence of the project. Aave's position in the lending sector is quite clear, with a monopoly advantage that is quite obvious—Active loans account for more than 60%, and this data clearly shows market recognition. Short-term emotional fluctuations cannot change the long-term pattern. Technical and fundamental aspects should still be viewed separately; panic selling is often an opportunity.