Recently, there is a phenomenon worth noting—large-scale financing announcements often serve as signals of a market top.
The recent RIVER trend is a typical example. After a well-known investor announced entry, the coin price surged by 15 times, then instantly collapsed. This "positive news followed by a dump" pattern is not uncommon.
From a technical perspective, the daily chart shows a classic "A-shaped kill" pattern, indicating a clear short-selling opportunity. A key resistance level around 16.0 is stacked with hundreds of millions of locked-in positions, making this barrier difficult to break.
From a game theory standpoint, large orders tend to bounce back to the price levels where they entered. Based on the current technical structure, the following price levels can be monitored:
The success rate of such market moves largely depends on position selection and risk management. Whether to act or not is a personal decision, but understanding the underlying market logic is more important.
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GasFeeTherapist
· 10h ago
Coming back with this again? Funding is just a signal to escape the top, why don't I believe it...
The RIVER case indeed underperformed, but it's always the same story every time, give me a break.
I'm tired of hearing about the A-shape kill; is it really that accurate to make you rich?
When will the 14.80 price level come? I'm here waiting for bankruptcy.
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0xSherlock
· 19h ago
It's the same old trick again, positive financing = a signal to escape the top. RIVER's move this time was too obvious.
I've seen the "A-shape" kill signal too many times, but this time the technical aspect is indeed a bit fierce.
The 16-dollar level really needs to be blocked, or else it will just keep crashing.
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AirdropNinja
· 01-11 04:56
It's the same old trick, when there's good news about financing, you should run. This time, RIVER really outdid itself.
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DegenGambler
· 01-11 04:40
It's the same old trick. As soon as the funding news comes out, everyone should run. A painful lesson.
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UncleWhale
· 01-11 04:35
It's the same old trick again. Big investors promote once and then dump the market. Truly speechless.
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AirdropHustler
· 01-11 04:29
It's the same old trick, financing announcements are just gathering places for bagholders.
I don't buy this, I'll wait until it drops to $5 to see.
Once the financing party announces, they should run. This time RIVER really outdid itself.
Location selection? Ha, easy to say, retail investors don't have such sharp instincts.
Hundreds of millions locked in here, a rebound is simply impossible.
Tired of this "pump first, dump later" routine, someone always ends up holding the bag.
Around 16 is the death valley; I refuse to touch it.
Recently, there is a phenomenon worth noting—large-scale financing announcements often serve as signals of a market top.
The recent RIVER trend is a typical example. After a well-known investor announced entry, the coin price surged by 15 times, then instantly collapsed. This "positive news followed by a dump" pattern is not uncommon.
From a technical perspective, the daily chart shows a classic "A-shaped kill" pattern, indicating a clear short-selling opportunity. A key resistance level around 16.0 is stacked with hundreds of millions of locked-in positions, making this barrier difficult to break.
From a game theory standpoint, large orders tend to bounce back to the price levels where they entered. Based on the current technical structure, the following price levels can be monitored:
**Entry Range**: 14.80-15.60
**Stop Loss**: 17.80
**Target Prices**: 10.50 → 7.20 → 5.00
The success rate of such market moves largely depends on position selection and risk management. Whether to act or not is a personal decision, but understanding the underlying market logic is more important.