You can tell at a glance that the price action of this FHE (Fully Homomorphic Encryption) concept coin is fishy.
Look, it shot up violently by 232% straight from the bottom, surged right to the trendline resistance, and had massive trading volume. Before this move, the market cap was less than $5 million, and even now it's still under $10 million. Frankly, it doesn't take much capital at all to pump this coin hard.
This kind of price movement is clearly a pump-and-dump scheme. If they really wanted to do a long-term move, the whales would consolidate at the bottom first, slowly accumulating and building positions. That's why I opened a short at the $0.048 level and plan to hold it—these violent coins usually come crashing down just as quickly as they soared.
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SignatureLiquidator
· 2025-12-10 16:52
Uh, this pot is indeed too small. A 232% increase, all in one shot, what does it mean? It means no one is willing to buy in anymore.
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TideReceder
· 2025-12-09 20:15
I've seen too many of these small-cap pumps. This is just the typical vampire whale tactic—draining retail investors in one go.
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NotSatoshi
· 2025-12-09 13:00
Haha, it's the same old trick again. Small-cap pumps always end in disaster.
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FUD_Vaccinated
· 2025-12-08 01:51
This is the same old trick with small-cap coins again: a 232% pump with huge volume. Unless something unexpected happens, it’ll probably dump soon.
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GasOptimizer
· 2025-12-08 01:50
232% increase with a market cap of 5 million—this is exactly how capital efficiency works here. I calculated how much capital is needed to trigger this kind of fluctuation—it’s really not much. Historical data tells me that the hedging strategy for these small-cap coins comes down to one word: speed. Holding short positions to the end is fine, but you need to watch closely for the point when trading volume starts to shrink.
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GateUser-e19e9c10
· 2025-12-08 01:50
Haha, this coin is obviously a pump-and-dump scheme, a 232% violent surge is definitely fishy, I can see the problem too.
Holding onto a short position until the end is a solid move; for low-cap coins like this, they rise and fall just as quickly.
Consolidation at the bottom is how real whales play; when it pumps up so aggressively, there’s definitely nothing good coming.
Never chase highs with these kinds of coins, getting whipsawed back and forth is really tough.
I’m also waiting for it to crash; that’s the upside of low-cap coins—they drop just as fast.
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governance_lurker
· 2025-12-08 01:31
I've seen this kind of aggressive pump many times before; just waiting for the dump now. Low market cap coins can't withstand any turbulence at all.
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fork_in_the_road
· 2025-12-08 01:28
This surge is indeed a bit rushed, the pump is so fierce that I feel tired for it.
You can tell at a glance that the price action of this FHE (Fully Homomorphic Encryption) concept coin is fishy.
Look, it shot up violently by 232% straight from the bottom, surged right to the trendline resistance, and had massive trading volume. Before this move, the market cap was less than $5 million, and even now it's still under $10 million. Frankly, it doesn't take much capital at all to pump this coin hard.
This kind of price movement is clearly a pump-and-dump scheme. If they really wanted to do a long-term move, the whales would consolidate at the bottom first, slowly accumulating and building positions. That's why I opened a short at the $0.048 level and plan to hold it—these violent coins usually come crashing down just as quickly as they soared.