Recently, watching the Hong Kong stock IPOs has been quite lively, and I suddenly realize a truth.
Truly high-quality projects, why do they loudly promote retail investors to jump in from the very beginning? Those that are constantly recruiting people and aggressively advertising, should we question them instead?
Good things are always quietly laid out. By the time you see widespread promotions, it might no longer be the best entry point. This logic applies equally to new coin offerings in the crypto space, right?
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CryptoGoldmine
· 15h ago
Looking at this perspective, it reminds me of the ROI data I recently compiled for new listings. The projects with the most hype, when looking back at the three-month mining profit ratio, are actually all on the decline. Truly strategic opportunities are indeed found in information gaps.
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StakeWhisperer
· 12-12 13:54
The old tricks of new coin offerings in the crypto world have been exploited countless times. I've seen through it.
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HypotheticalLiquidator
· 12-11 03:28
That's an interesting way to put it, but I have to pour cold water on it—health factors are actually worst in this kind of "quietly laying out" narrative. By the time you realize there's a "good thing," the risk control threshold has long been broken, and a chain reaction of liquidations is just around the corner.
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TokenStorm
· 12-11 03:28
The batch of crazy promotions, once you pull up the on-chain data, the true nature is revealed. They were already eaten up by institutions long ago, we're just here to take over the leftovers.
That's true, but I still experience FOMO because greed has overridden rationality. Isn't the storm's epicenter where the biggest profits are?
Top-quality projects are all laid out on the dark web. By the time you realize, they've already been locked out by whales. Our group of retail investors is just gambling on whether we can keep up with the rhythm.
It's too late to wake up, brother. I was already all in when the promotion was everywhere. The losses now have taught me to read K-line charts.
That's a good point, but who can guarantee they won't be the last one to leave? Anyway, I've become numb.
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DeFiDoctor
· 12-11 03:20
Hey, that's not right. The projects I looked at, the earlier the funding round, the more aggressive the promotion... The medical records show that the liquidity indicators can't sustain that level of enthusiasm at all.
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ApeShotFirst
· 12-11 03:15
Wow, this logic is amazing! I've been cut before, so I understand now, haha.
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OfflineValidator
· 12-11 03:12
That's right, the projects that hype themselves the most often have more hidden issues.
Recently, watching the Hong Kong stock IPOs has been quite lively, and I suddenly realize a truth.
Truly high-quality projects, why do they loudly promote retail investors to jump in from the very beginning? Those that are constantly recruiting people and aggressively advertising, should we question them instead?
Good things are always quietly laid out. By the time you see widespread promotions, it might no longer be the best entry point. This logic applies equally to new coin offerings in the crypto space, right?