Recently, observing the social media activity of executives from a leading exchange revealed an interesting shift.



Their narrative style has quietly changed. They no longer rush to prove how smart they are or how correct their decisions are. Instead, they frequently remind everyone not to fall into traps, not to follow the crowd, and not to be driven by emotions. This is a stark contrast to their early style.

**Former Approach**

Back then, the rhetoric was straightforward: talk about efficiency, compete in products, pursue scale expansion, and seize the global market. The core question was simply—how fast can we go? The entire industry was competing on speed and ambition.

**Current Pace**

Now? The frequently used words have become: risk, mindset, long-termism, uncertainty. Instead of giving you definitive answers like "buy this, and you'll be right," they repeatedly emphasize a potential meaning—the anxious person can't make money.

**Why the change? One sentence: Too many failures witnessed**

Over the past decade, these industry practitioners have witnessed countless "genius traders"
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0xSherlockvip
· 01-12 09:57
Haha, this is what it means to learn to act pretentious after experiencing losses. The wolf culture from the early days has now become a complete joke.
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PumpStrategistvip
· 01-12 06:56
This wave of rhetoric shift, at its core, is just the mentality of starting to cut others' leeks after risk has been released. --- Interesting, from "I'm the best" to "Don't rush," the typical pattern of chips has formed, and it's the rhythm to sell off. --- Basically, they've eaten their fill, and now they're acting as mentors to harvest anxious people. I don't know whether to laugh or cry. --- The pattern has formed, and senior management collectively turning to conservative tones is itself a signal. --- How fast can they run? Don't rush. Isn't the gap in the middle just them making enough profit? From a probabilistic strategy perspective, this is indeed a turning point. --- Haha, having seen too many failures, they start pretending to be long-termists? Wake up, it's still the old trick of cutting leeks. --- Market sentiment indicators are at their peak. Their current words are completely opposite to the rhetoric from three years ago. That's a pretty big logical flaw. --- The increasingly conservative tone just shows that the chip distribution has become highly concentrated, and the risk has been released. --- A typical leek mentality is believing that after hearing their words, you can truly hold long-term. It's hilarious.
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LiquiditySurfervip
· 01-12 06:56
Haha, basically those who got cut start pretending to be honest. Once the business stabilizes, who would still talk to you about risks?
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potentially_notablevip
· 01-12 06:46
Ha, you're right. After seeing too many leeks get liquidated, no one believes in bragging anymore. --- This wave of change is actually just paving the way for oneself, a feeling of "I told you so" long ago. --- People who give up have all learned to talk about "long-termism," it's funny. --- What I really want to say is—those who make money have all shut up. --- No wonder, after all, with so much FUD, making money seems unprofessional. --- Once you see through it, you see through it. Turns out smart people keep brainwashing others not to rush. --- Laughing to death, this is what you call having learned enough lessons. --- Honestly, it's just about maintaining a persona and possibly cutting a more cautious wave later.
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