Seeing UNI currently hovering at $4.23, with a 24-hour decline of -0.75%, I can't help but recall those miserable investment days. I initially regarded it as a treasure to hoard, but as soon as I bought in, I suffered a brutal 50% cut. That feeling is still unforgettable. After enduring nearly a year, I finally managed to break free. Since then, I’ve learned my lesson and only dare to build positions when the price drops more than 50%.
Looking back at the price trend, it’s been a series of brutal cuts, with gains far less than 10%, and even lower than the initial high points. Ironically, there are more positive news than ever before, yet the price keeps falling, exposing the tactics of treating spot retail investors like pigs to slaughter. Every time there’s positive news, it becomes a good opportunity for the whales to realize profits—buying sports cars, dining extravagantly, and enjoying luxury with their entourages. When they need funds, they occasionally release good news to lure retail investors in, then start harvesting once the timing is right.
This is the cruel reality of the market: when you treat a project as a treasure, the project team treats you as an ATM. Retail investors’ enthusiasm is always the best financing tool for the whales.
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Seeing UNI currently hovering at $4.23, with a 24-hour decline of -0.75%, I can't help but recall those miserable investment days. I initially regarded it as a treasure to hoard, but as soon as I bought in, I suffered a brutal 50% cut. That feeling is still unforgettable. After enduring nearly a year, I finally managed to break free. Since then, I’ve learned my lesson and only dare to build positions when the price drops more than 50%.
Looking back at the price trend, it’s been a series of brutal cuts, with gains far less than 10%, and even lower than the initial high points. Ironically, there are more positive news than ever before, yet the price keeps falling, exposing the tactics of treating spot retail investors like pigs to slaughter. Every time there’s positive news, it becomes a good opportunity for the whales to realize profits—buying sports cars, dining extravagantly, and enjoying luxury with their entourages. When they need funds, they occasionally release good news to lure retail investors in, then start harvesting once the timing is right.
This is the cruel reality of the market: when you treat a project as a treasure, the project team treats you as an ATM. Retail investors’ enthusiasm is always the best financing tool for the whales.