ZEC dropped from $750 to $550, then was pierced down to $533. The hot search instantly exploded, and retail communities were in mourning.
But is this wave of decline really a collapse? Not necessarily.
On the surface, 90% of people see only "dumping," but from a different perspective—there are actually two simultaneous actions happening in the market: retail panic selling and the main players rotating their chips.
**The truth behind the surge in hot searches**
ZEC search volume surged by 300%, topping the charts. It looks terrifying, but there's a rule in the crypto world: hot searches never record celebrations, only pain points.
People chasing above $700 are selling at $550. Those who just bought the dip at $550 are scared out by the piercing down to $533. This cycle of "selling → buying the dip → selling again" isn't actual distribution, but rapid chip rotation.
Data speaks: in the past 12 hours, ZEC spot trading volume exceeded $800 million, 2.5 times the monthly average. The more aggressive the turnover, the smaller the resistance to subsequent rebounds—previous floating chips are handed over to steadfast holders.
**The chain reaction of contract liquidations**
Looking at the derivatives side, the open interest in ZEC perpetual contracts once surged to 120,000 contracts, with a long-short ratio of 1.8:1. This extreme structure is like a bomb.
The main players' operation logic is very clear: First, break through the support at $580 → trigger the first batch of long liquidations Then pierce down to $533 → liquidate the longs who re-entered
The key detail is that most of the liquidations involve small retail positions.
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WalletManager
· 2h ago
$800 million trading volume turnover, chips are being reshuffled, this is a signal that the main players are collecting cheap chips.
Retail investors are crying on trending searches again, but on-chain data has long made it clear... hold your private keys and wait for the rebound.
That needle prick at 533 was really harsh, but what I see is that the resistance behind is decreasing, and that’s the key.
Most contract liquidations are small retail investors; after this wave of selling, it’s likely to take off. Staying calm and holding is the right way.
Trending search explosions are the best signals for bottom fishing; think about it the other way around.
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TradFiRefugee
· 12-24 16:50
It's the same old trick again. As soon as the trending topics explode, someone starts talking about chip turnover... The main players are the happiest when retail investors suffer heavy losses.
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DeFi_Dad_Jokes
· 12-24 16:41
It's the same old story, big players swapping chips while retail investors get squeezed out. I'm tired of hearing it, haha.
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AirdropAutomaton
· 12-24 16:25
Oh no, it's the same story again. Retail investors sell at a loss while the big players profit. How many times has this script been written?
ZEC dropped from $750 to $550, then was pierced down to $533. The hot search instantly exploded, and retail communities were in mourning.
But is this wave of decline really a collapse? Not necessarily.
On the surface, 90% of people see only "dumping," but from a different perspective—there are actually two simultaneous actions happening in the market: retail panic selling and the main players rotating their chips.
**The truth behind the surge in hot searches**
ZEC search volume surged by 300%, topping the charts. It looks terrifying, but there's a rule in the crypto world: hot searches never record celebrations, only pain points.
People chasing above $700 are selling at $550.
Those who just bought the dip at $550 are scared out by the piercing down to $533.
This cycle of "selling → buying the dip → selling again" isn't actual distribution, but rapid chip rotation.
Data speaks: in the past 12 hours, ZEC spot trading volume exceeded $800 million, 2.5 times the monthly average. The more aggressive the turnover, the smaller the resistance to subsequent rebounds—previous floating chips are handed over to steadfast holders.
**The chain reaction of contract liquidations**
Looking at the derivatives side, the open interest in ZEC perpetual contracts once surged to 120,000 contracts, with a long-short ratio of 1.8:1. This extreme structure is like a bomb.
The main players' operation logic is very clear:
First, break through the support at $580 → trigger the first batch of long liquidations
Then pierce down to $533 → liquidate the longs who re-entered
The key detail is that most of the liquidations involve small retail positions.