RIVER's recent performance has been quite intense—retracing from 23 down to 12, with nearly a 20% drop today alone. The ups and downs feel like riding a roller coaster. Looking back, this coin surged from 1.6 to 23 in less than a month. Now the correction is happening even faster, but here's the interesting part: the SUPERTRND support level is firmly stuck at 2.9. Although trading volume is sluggish, it still maintains a volume of 494 million. This characteristic is typical of retail investors cutting losses while institutions take the opportunity to accumulate.



Looking at the daily chart, the sharp decline hasn't broken through the previous starting point, indicating that the downward movement is still controllable. The MA5 is beginning to turn downward, but there's still plenty of room before hitting the support zone—shrinking volume during adjustment often signals a buildup phase. Some say it's like buying something new only to accidentally drop it; a quick wipe can make it usable again. Small-cap coins in the crypto market tend to rebound in a similar logical pattern.

RIVER is a small-cap coin that was previously driven entirely by hype. Once the hype cooled down, market enthusiasm plummeted. But the biggest advantage of such coins is their extremely small circulating supply—once funds enter, the rebound can be astonishing. I've seen similar situations: a coin dropped from 20 to 8, I bought in, and three days later it rebounded to 15. It’s that simple.

Currently, RIVER's price is stuck at 12, just a hair above the day's low of 11.5. Trading volume has shrunk close to zero. This is precisely the prelude to a small-cap rebound—when most people are too afraid to act, that’s the real opportunity window. Small-cap coins are like small cards at a gambling table; they may seem insignificant individually, but forming a straight can lead to a win.

My plan is clear: go long at this stage, set stop-loss at 11, and exit if the loss reaches 10%. Take profit at 15, a 20% increase, and cash out. This isn’t gambling; it’s waiting for a normal rebound cycle of small-cap coins under controlled risk.

And you? When faced with such a sharp decline, do you choose to stand on the sidelines and complain, or quietly buy a little to test the waters?
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GamefiHarvestervip
· 18h ago
With the speed dropping from 23 to 12, it's really like a roller coaster... But the shrinking volume trend does seem to have some substance. I also bought in when it fell from 20 to 8. The thrill of the rebound was incredible. Now, let's see if RIVER can replicate that.
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0xLuckboxvip
· 18h ago
Tired of the usual institutional accumulation tricks, just want to know how high this can go this time
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AirdropJunkievip
· 18h ago
23 drops to 12, this speed is incredible... But the shrinking volume signal is real, small coins are really affected by this, just wait for the rebound.
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WhaleWatchervip
· 18h ago
From 23 to 12, still claiming to be accumulating momentum—really outrageous --- The big-cap coins rebound more, that's true, but it also means more losses --- Institutional accumulation? Ha, I think it's more like the final wave of cutting losses --- Stop-loss at 11, take-profit at 15, sounds good, but in reality --- I'm tired of the excuse of "shrinking volume to build momentum," in the end, it's just more dumping --- Daring to say that risk is controllable when dealing with these small coins—really bold --- Wait, haven't you lost before, or do you always buy at the bottom? --- That logic could fool people last year, but who still believes it now? --- Small circulating supply must rebound? What kind of logic is that? --- I just want to ask one question: why do the people who always buy at the bottom of these coins lose the most
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SchrodingerWalletvip
· 19h ago
Your analysis has some substance, but I still think it's too optimistic. Dropping from 23 to 12 indicates what? It shows that the previous rise was outrageous, and the current correction might not be over yet. Reduced volume doesn't necessarily mean accumulation; it could also mean there's simply no one interested anymore. Small-cap coins, while capable of large rebounds, also have faster cut-loss speeds. I've been cut twice before. That stop-loss point at 11 sounds solid, but in actual operation, would you dare to execute it? That's the question.
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