Yesterday's MSTR price action? That was panic selling in its purest form. Retail holders dumping shares straight into institutional hands—classic capitulation move.
Saw the exact same pattern with IBIT last week when BTC touched that $80K level. Sharp drop, mass exits, institutions scooping up the dip.
These bottoms don't get retested often. Once the weak hands shake out and smart money steps in, the floor usually holds.
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GateUser-0717ab66
· 2h ago
Retail investors got dumped on again, institutions taking over is such an old trick.
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ProposalManiac
· 11h ago
What seems to be the bottom is actually a process of liquidity reallocation. The retail investors' cut loss is essentially a failure of the incentive mechanism—without a sufficient risk buffer mechanism, structural pressure leads to a complete collapse as soon as it appears.
The logic of MSTR and IBIT can be replicated once or twice, but what about the third time? The integrity of the mechanism design is the key; relying solely on institutional catch a falling knife is far from enough.
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BanklessAtHeart
· 11h ago
ngl it's again the same story of retail investors and dumb buyers, the script is always the same.
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ChainWallflower
· 11h ago
weak hands cut loss, smart money accumulation, I've seen this play too many times haha
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GasWhisperer
· 11h ago
panic selling is just weak hands sending their shares to smarter wallets... watched the mempool during that dip, fee patterns screamed institutional accumulation ngl
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GasFeeSurvivor
· 11h ago
Retail investors have given money to institutions again. I've seen this operation too many times.
Yesterday's MSTR price action? That was panic selling in its purest form. Retail holders dumping shares straight into institutional hands—classic capitulation move.
Saw the exact same pattern with IBIT last week when BTC touched that $80K level. Sharp drop, mass exits, institutions scooping up the dip.
These bottoms don't get retested often. Once the weak hands shake out and smart money steps in, the floor usually holds.