Some observations on BEAT's recent market performance. The recent 24-hour decline of 20% looks alarming, but it may not indicate a trend reversal. From the perspective of the chip structure, circulating supply accounts for only 13.93%, and this ratio actually determines the future direction—supply is locked tightly, and once demand moves, it will inevitably cause an imbalance.
Looking at it from another angle, manipulating the market through dumping and wash trading is nothing new. The main force wants to acquire chips at low prices, so they need to scare out retail investors. Those who are now cutting losses are likely to recover at higher levels later. So this wave of correction might actually be the last chance to get in.
Of course, this is just market observation and does not constitute any trading advice.
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PumpDoctrine
· 8h ago
13.93% circulation is really outrageous, that's the key point. A 20% drop doesn't scare me at all.
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BTCBeliefStation
· 8h ago
13.93% circulation... This is locked in. Once the breakthrough happens, it will inevitably surge. Those who sell now will regret it.
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ChainComedian
· 8h ago
Another manipulation tactic; retail investors are still too easily scared out.
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AirdropworkerZhang
· 9h ago
13.93% of the circulating supply... Hey, this data is interesting. If the lock-up is this aggressive, it's indeed easy to get hit with a wave of selling.
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failed_dev_successful_ape
· 9h ago
Damn, 13.93% circulating supply. They really hid the chips completely. When the price surges, retail investors will be jumping off the building.
Some observations on BEAT's recent market performance. The recent 24-hour decline of 20% looks alarming, but it may not indicate a trend reversal. From the perspective of the chip structure, circulating supply accounts for only 13.93%, and this ratio actually determines the future direction—supply is locked tightly, and once demand moves, it will inevitably cause an imbalance.
Looking at it from another angle, manipulating the market through dumping and wash trading is nothing new. The main force wants to acquire chips at low prices, so they need to scare out retail investors. Those who are now cutting losses are likely to recover at higher levels later. So this wave of correction might actually be the last chance to get in.
Of course, this is just market observation and does not constitute any trading advice.