RIVER has recently experienced a significant change in its market situation. From January 1st to now, buy orders below 10 have almost never appeared, but now the situation has reversed—more and more orders below 10 are showing up. What does this indicate? The main force's chips are accumulated too heavily in their hands, making it hard to shake off.
Looking at the current situation, the main force basically has only two options. One is to continue to push aggressively, targeting short positions, and then use repeated oscillations to digest large amounts of chips. During this process, the bulls will gradually exit to take profits, new buy orders will break off, and ultimately, it will spiral downward. The other is to directly start oscillating to unload, skipping the rally phase.
Regardless of which choice is made, the final outcome points in the same direction—sharp decline.
From the perspective of the long-short ratio, the current market shows an extreme configuration of 9:1, with 60% of the circulating chips still concentrated in the hands of the big players. Under this structure, it is difficult to see orderly accumulation in the short term. Especially around key times such as funding rate settlements, liquidity will fluctuate significantly, and risks need to be taken seriously.
If you are still in RIVER now, you should consider taking profits. Greed is often the most expensive tuition in the market.
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ForkPrince
· 01-15 05:21
This market is indeed starting to become unsustainable; with such heavy chip pressure, it should have come out earlier.
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ForkThisDAO
· 01-12 20:51
Damn, the main chips are stacked so much but still can't be dumped, this is outrageous.
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9:1 leverage? Isn't this just waiting to cut the leeks? I need to run quickly.
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Another prediction of a sharp decline, but RIVER, this wave really should take profits, right?
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60% of the chips are in the hands of the big players, and we're retail investors still taking the bait? That's hilarious.
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On the night before fee settlement, liquidity is being cut wave after wave, this market is tough.
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Whether to hold tight or to sell outright, both are dead ends. Instead of waiting for a spiral decline, better to run now.
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Greed is the most expensive tuition, but I am greedy. What can I do, brother?
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ETHmaxi_NoFilter
· 01-12 20:50
I've already seen it clearly, the main force's position is truly suffocating, and the chips are in their hands.
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InfraVibes
· 01-12 20:50
Nothing has been listed below 10 for a while, and now it suddenly piles up. The main force really can't push it out... This market smells suspicious.
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The 9:1 long-short configuration is outrageous. What are we even playing here?
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Another story of being trapped by the main force. RIVER is probably in deep trouble this time.
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I just want to ask those still holding onto RIVER, are you really confident or just trapped?
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60% of the chips are in the hands of the big players. What is this liquidity? It's basically a fight for survival.
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The term "sharp decline" is too blunt, but it’s not wrong. Everyone should consider withdrawing.
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Before fee settlement, this wave of volatility will cause liquidity to break, and then it will plunge directly. I bet five bucks on it.
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RIVER will either rally sharply and then die, or just dump and die. Since it's all going to die anyway, I choose to leave now.
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TokenomicsDetective
· 01-12 20:49
The main chips are accumulating so aggressively, I totally understand the feeling of being unable to shake them off. This is a super dangerous signal.
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An extreme long-short ratio of 9:1, with 60% still in the hands of the whales—it's like dancing on a bomb.
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Both hard pulling and dumping are dead ends; in other words, just waiting for a crash.
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Friends still in the RIVER, you really should consider taking profits, or you'll end up paying tuition with your trades.
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Since January, there have been no buy orders, and now suddenly orders below 10 are piling up—this contrast is too obvious. The main force really can't hold on anymore.
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Liquidity fluctuations before and after the funding rate settlement mean the risk is at its highest; be cautious.
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Both paths lead to a crash, with terrifyingly clear logic. It seems I need to exit early.
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With such a high concentration of dog whales, retail investors have no room for a game; why not run now?
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FunGibleTom
· 01-12 20:35
Another "Crash Prophet"? Is the 9:1 ratio really that absolute? I feel like someone is calling for a decline every day.
RIVER has recently experienced a significant change in its market situation. From January 1st to now, buy orders below 10 have almost never appeared, but now the situation has reversed—more and more orders below 10 are showing up. What does this indicate? The main force's chips are accumulated too heavily in their hands, making it hard to shake off.
Looking at the current situation, the main force basically has only two options. One is to continue to push aggressively, targeting short positions, and then use repeated oscillations to digest large amounts of chips. During this process, the bulls will gradually exit to take profits, new buy orders will break off, and ultimately, it will spiral downward. The other is to directly start oscillating to unload, skipping the rally phase.
Regardless of which choice is made, the final outcome points in the same direction—sharp decline.
From the perspective of the long-short ratio, the current market shows an extreme configuration of 9:1, with 60% of the circulating chips still concentrated in the hands of the big players. Under this structure, it is difficult to see orderly accumulation in the short term. Especially around key times such as funding rate settlements, liquidity will fluctuate significantly, and risks need to be taken seriously.
If you are still in RIVER now, you should consider taking profits. Greed is often the most expensive tuition in the market.