An active address's recent average cost basis is locked in at a market cap level of $74K. From on-chain data, the entry points of large holdings like this often reflect the risk pricing logic of institutions or seasoned investors. Monitoring the capital flow at these key levels at this stage can provide some reference for understanding the market bottom support.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
7 Likes
Reward
7
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
GetRichLeek
· 4h ago
Is 74K a signal to bottom out? I'm really torn right now... The chip distribution of these big players often leads the market by half a beat. I missed it last time and ended up losing heavily, and I haven't recovered yet.
View OriginalReply0
DefiOldTrickster
· 4h ago
74K this position? Haha, I knew these institutional old foxes had something up their sleeves. Turns out they were all lurking here.
---
The true bottom support has never been something blown out by technical analysis; it depends on how the big players on the chain act. That’s the real gold standard for pricing power.
---
Damn, it’s the same old trick again. Every time they talk about key levels, but when there are too many key levels, they stop being key haha.
---
For the guys entering at 74K, I bet 5 bucks they have a backup plan. It’s impossible to just go all-in and do nothing.
---
This data is only interesting when combined with the liquidation price; otherwise, it’s just guesswork.
---
On-chain veterans have this much integrity: pretending to be calm and patient, but deep down they’re already reinvesting and arbitraging. I see through you all.
---
Honestly, observing big players is a hundred times more interesting than just looking at K-line charts. That’s the real source of alpha.
---
Wait, has there been any unusual movement in the fund flow of this address over the past two weeks? That’s what I care about. The cost basis of the position doesn’t tell me anything.
View OriginalReply0
DAOplomacy
· 4h ago
74k entry? idk, feels like historical precedent suggests these "key positions" are more about path dependency than actual floor support... the game theoretical implications are arguably non-trivial here
Reply0
MetaLord420
· 4h ago
The 74k level, big players have already been lurking here.
View OriginalReply0
SellTheBounce
· 4h ago
74k entered? Haha, there's always a lower point, that's what the market has taught me.
---
Institutional pricing logic... sounds very professional, but I only trust historical data. Sell on rebounds, don't overthink it.
---
On-chain data looks good, but human weaknesses never change. Be patient, there's definitely room to buy more.
---
This brother's entry timing is average, I bet his current mindset is also average.
---
Bottom support? Haha, it needs to drop further to confirm, my friend.
---
Looking at this position... the list of last-minute buyers is about to be updated again.
---
The market bottom is found like this—waiting until no one dares to look, then it's the real bottom. This guy is still early.
---
Can the entry point reflect risk pricing? I think it reflects that they haven't decided how much more to buy.
---
A cost of 74k indicates even big players are uncertain. The trading philosophy is—when uncertain, be more cautious.
---
No matter how beautiful the on-chain data is, it can't change one fact: buying more after a drop is always the right choice.
View OriginalReply0
SillyWhale
· 4h ago
The 74k level is indeed quite aggressive; the institutions' move commands respect.
An active address's recent average cost basis is locked in at a market cap level of $74K. From on-chain data, the entry points of large holdings like this often reflect the risk pricing logic of institutions or seasoned investors. Monitoring the capital flow at these key levels at this stage can provide some reference for understanding the market bottom support.