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UB is currently the most discussed not because of the size of the drop, but because of disagreement.
Over the past 24 hours, UB is down 20.02%, with a deeper pullback. The focus now is not how much it has fallen, but whether the selling pressure is nearing exhaustion. The current price is around 0.07806, with 24h trading volume of about 10.9314 million. Increased volume pushing downward looks more like panic selling is being concentrated and released.
Reference indicators: 30m Super Trend is 0.082194. The current price has broken below the reference level, suggesting the trend protection level has begun to come under pressure. 30m KDJ is 8.74/13.75/-1.28, indicating the short-term is already more panicked/oversold. The J value is in a low position. The key to watch next is whether any rebound has a second confirmation.
Bulls will keep an eye on whether the trend protection level can be reclaimed; cautious traders will watch whether the short-term rebound forms a second confirmation. If these two indicators conflict, the short term is likely to remain choppy and flip-flop.
Next are two possible paths: one is recovery after panic selling is released; the other is continued weakness on a rebound with low volume. I’m not rushing to draw a conclusion—I’ll wait for the next round of trading to get the answer.
MYX is currently generating the most discussion not about the drop, but about disagreement.
Over the past 24 hours, MYX is down 22.48%, with a deeper pullback. The key focus now isn’t how much it has fallen, but whether the selling pressure is nearing its end. The current price is about 0.0623, with 24h trading volume of about 13.8280 million. The increased volume pressing downward looks more like panic selling is concentrated and being released.
Reference indicators: the 30m RSI at 10.68 is already oversold, suggesting that short-term panic is somewhat saturated. The 30m Super Trend at 0.067370—since the current price has broken below the reference level—indicates that the trend support/guard level is starting to come under pressure.
Bulls will watch to see whether fear sentiment begins to repair; the cautious camp will watch whether the trend support level can be reclaimed. If these two points conflict, the short-term action is prone to repeat.
Next are two possible paths: one is that after panic has been released, it stabilizes and repairs; the other is that a weak rebound with no accompanying volume continues the downturn. I’m not rushing to a conclusion—I’ll wait for the next round of trading for the answer.
An experienced trader looks at KORU: the first thing you notice isn’t the drop, but whether the sell orders after the sharp selloff are still going to keep hitting.
Over the past 24 hours, KORU is down 18.45%. The pullback is deep. The key point isn’t how much it fell, but whether the selling pressure is close to running its course. The current price is around 457.19, and the 24h trading volume is about 1.047 billion. Heavy volume pushing down looks more like panic selling releasing in a concentrated burst.
Reference indicators: the 30m Supertrend is 427.491000; the current price is above it, suggesting the structure leans toward trend continuation. The 30m KDJ is 19.53 / 30.48 / -2.38, indicating the short-term setup is already leaning toward panic/oversold. The J value is at a low level—what to watch next is whether any rebound has a second confirmation.
In the order book, you need two answers: can the trend-protection level be reclaimed again, and does the short-term rebound form a second confirmation. Only if both hold steady does it look like a repair; if only one holds, it’s still a weak, range-bound consolidation.
For this kind of pullback, what really matters isn’t how much it fell, but whether the sell pressure is able to be absorbed and whether the structure can be put back together.
JTO The most counterintuitive part of this sell-off: the more panic, the more you should check whether the selling pressure is nearly finished.
In the past 24 hours, JTO is down -19.76%. After a deep pullback, the key point now isn’t how much it has fallen, but whether the selling pressure is approaching its end. The current price is around 0.6311. In the last 24h, trading volume is about 44.8854 million. With increased volume pushing down, it looks more like panic selling is being concentrated and released.
Reference indicators: the 30m RSI at 13.23 is already oversold, suggesting short-term panic is close to being fully “saturated.” The 30m Super Trend is 0.682840; the current price has broken below the reference level, meaning trend support is starting to come under pressure.
The real “flow” depends on divergence: some people expect it to break down further, while others expect a panic-driven rebound and repair. I personally want to see whether panic sentiment has started to recover. If it doesn’t, then even a sharp rebound is likely to turn into only weak recovery.
At this kind of level, don’t rush to guess the bottom—on the next rebound, the quality matters more than the viewpoint.
SIREN Which side are you on this round: panic release, or continued weakness?
SIREN over the past 24 hours: -18.65%. The pullback is deep. The key now is not how much it dropped, but whether selling pressure is nearing the end of its wave. Current price is about 0.0272; 24h trading volume is about 20.0927 million. The increased volume pressing down looks more like panic orders concentrating and releasing.
Reference indicators: 30m Super Trend at 0.026056. The current price is above it, suggesting the structure leans toward trend continuation. 30m KDJ is 63.42/55.29/79.69, indicating short-term divergence is still in the middle zone.
I’ll split the call into two tickets: one to see whether the trend protection level can be reclaimed; the other to see whether a short-term pullback rebound can form a second confirmation. Only when both tickets are solid can we call it a repair; if only one is solid, it’s still range-bound action.
In the comments, just say it directly: are you looking for continuation, or for a pullback?
BSB This wave: which side are you on—panic release, or continued weakness?
BSB over the past 24 hours is down -22.43%. The pullback has been deep. What matters now isn’t how much it has fallen, but whether the selling pressure is nearing the end. The current price is about 0.13789, with 24h trading volume of about 17.4926 million. Increased volume pushing downward looks more like panic orders concentrating and unloading.
Reference indicators: 30m RSI 26.07 is already oversold, suggesting short-term panic is close to being fully priced in. The 30m Super Trend level is 0.146033; the current price has broken below that reference level, indicating the trend’s support is starting to come under pressure.
I’ll split the call into two votes: one to see whether panic sentiment has started to repair, and the other to see whether the trend support can be reclaimed. Only if both votes hold can we call it a repair; if only one holds, then it’s still range-bound.
In the comments, just say: are you looking for continuation, or a pullback?
When a veteran looks at ARX, the first thing you notice isn’t the drop—it’s whether the sell orders after a sharp selloff still keep hitting.
ARX is down 16.86% over the past 24 hours, with a deeper retracement. The key now isn’t how much it has fallen, but whether the selling pressure is nearing exhaustion. Current price is about 0.182; 24h trading volume is about 54.7297 million. With volume expanding and pushing down, it looks more like panic selling concentrated in a release.
Reference indicators: the 30m Super Trend is 0.176480. Since the current price is above it, the structure leans toward trend continuation. However, current volume is only 0.0 times the normal level, suggesting weak participation from capital. If volume can’t be replenished later, then even if the price rebounds, its sustainability is likely to be discounted.
Give two answers from the order book: can the trend protection level be reclaimed again, and after the selloff and volume expansion, has the sell pressure started to fade? Only when both hold steady does it look like a repair; if only one holds, then it’s still a weak, range-bound consolidation.
For this kind of retracement, what truly matters isn’t how much it has fallen, but whether the selling pressure is being absorbed and whether the structure can be put back together.
LDO Where do you stand on this move: trend continuation, or profit-taking at the top?
Over the past 24 hours, LDO is up +17.98%, pushing sentiment into the high zone. The key now isn’t how much it’s risen, but whether the chasing buy orders can still hold the trend. The current price is around 0.3266, with a 24h trading volume of about 63.22 million. A breakout with increased volume is more indicative of funds chasing the move.
Reference indicators: the 30m Super Trend is 0.342290. If the current price falls below this reference level, it suggests the trend support is starting to come under pressure. The 30m KDJ is 69.33/72.52/62.95, indicating short-term disagreement is still hovering in the middle zone.
I’ll break my call into two votes: one to see whether the trend support level is breached again; the other to see whether, after a short-term pullback, price can turn back upward. If both votes pass, then the short-term strength is confirmed. If only one passes, whipsaws are more likely.
In the comments, just say it: do you think it continues, or do you think it will pull back?
Put TAKE data here first: you need to look at both the drawdown and trading volume together to know whether it’s panic selling. 5m -20.29%, current price 0.02022, 24h volume 4.7268M, VWAP 0.021989 (price is below), ADX 75.0.
The bounce won’t get through—weakness will likely continue. Only if it can hold and bounce back does it have a chance to recover.
OPG’s hottest topic right now isn’t the size of the drop—it’s the disagreement.
Over the past 24 hours, OPG is down 23.76%. The pullback is fairly deep. The key question now isn’t how much it has fallen, but whether the selling pressure is nearing its end. The current price is around 0.1213, and the 24h trading volume is about 104 million. With volume increasing as price is pushed down, it looks more like panic selling is being concentrated and released.
Reference indicators: the 30m Super Trend is 0.128160. The current price has broken below the reference level, which suggests the trend’s protection level is starting to come under pressure. The 30m KDJ is 64.61/46.83/100.18, indicating that the short-term chasing momentum feels somewhat full. The J value is still high, so next we need to see whether a pullback can be held.
Longs will watch whether the trend protection level can be reclaimed. Cautious traders will watch whether the short-term rebound forms a second confirmation. If these two points “fight,” the short term is likely to keep fluctuating.
Two possible paths ahead: one is that after panic selling, a repair rebound occurs; the other is that the rebound fails and, on low volume, weakness continues. I’m not drawing conclusions yet—I’ll wait for the next round of trading to provide the answer.
When experienced traders look at BIRB, the first thing they don’t notice is the percentage drop—it’s whether, after the sharp sell-off, the sell orders are still hammering or starting to ease.
Over the past 24 hours, BIRB is down -20.45%. The pullback is deep. The key now isn’t how much it fell, but whether the selling pressure is nearing the end. The current price is about 0.05851, with 24h trading value around 8.2834 million. The increase in volume while pushing down looks more like panic orders concentrating and releasing.
Reference indicators: 30m RSI at 12.89 is already oversold, suggesting short-term panic is getting close to being “filled”; the 30m Super Trend at 0.061964 has been broken by the current price, meaning the trend protection level is beginning to come under pressure.
You need two answers from the order book: whether panic sentiment has begun to recover, and whether the trend protection level can be reclaimed. If both hold, then it looks like a repair. If only one holds, it’s still weak, range-bound consolidation.
In this kind of pullback, what you truly should watch isn’t how much it dropped, but whether the sell pressure withdraws and whether the structure can be held and restored.
VELVET Which side are you on this wave: panic release, or weakness continuing?
VELVET over the past 24 hours -17.40%, with a deeper drawdown. The key now isn’t how much it has fallen, but whether the selling pressure is nearing the end. Current price is about 0.3969, with 24h trading volume around 46.5645 million. The increased volume pushing downward looks more like panic orders concentrating and releasing.
Reference indicators: 30m Super Trend 0.443910. The current price has broken below the reference level, meaning the trend’s support/protection level is starting to come under pressure. 30m KDJ is 16.40/31.56/-13.94, indicating the short-term is already leaning toward panic/sold-out conditions. The J value is at a low level—what to focus on next is whether any rebound gets a second confirmation.
I’ll split the call into two votes: one vote on whether the trend protection level can be reclaimed again, and one vote on whether the short-term rebound forms a second confirmation. Only if both votes are steady counts as a repair; if only one is steady, then it’s still just ranging/oscillating.
In the comments, just say: do you think it continues, or do you think it pulls back?
EVAA key divergence has already emerged: is it a launch, or just a trial probe. 5m +20.44%, current price 2.8344, 24h volume 701M, VWAP 2.5871 above, ADX 37.2.
The comments section is already taking sides: continuation, or a fake move?
SKYAI The most counterintuitive part of this sell-off: the more panic there is, the more you should check whether the selling pressure is about to be exhausted.
In the past 24 hours, SKYAI is down 25.23%, with a deeper pullback. The key now isn’t how much it has fallen, but whether the sell-off pressure is nearing the end of its cycle. The current price is about 0.03224, with 24h trading volume around 33.3442 million. With increased volume pressing down, it looks more like panic selling releasing in a concentrated burst.
Reference indicators: 30m Super Trend is 0.036195. The price has broken below the reference level, indicating the trend protection support is starting to come under pressure. The 30m KDJ is 21.05/39.01/-14.86, suggesting the short-term is already leaning toward panic/oversold conditions. The J value is at a low level; the next focus is whether any rebound gets a secondary confirmation.
The real volume “turning point” is at the point of divergence: some expect further breakdown, while others expect panic to be repaired. I personally want to see whether the trend protection support level can be reclaimed. If it can’t, even if the rebound is sharp, it’s likely to turn into weak repair.
At this kind of level, don’t rush to guess the bottom. The quality of the next rebound matters more than the viewpoint.
SLX’s hottest topic right now isn’t the drawdown—it’s the disagreement.
In the past 24 hours, SLX is down 19.81%, with a deeper pullback. The key now isn’t how much it’s fallen, but whether the selling pressure is nearing its end. The current price is around 0.16592, with 24h trading volume of about 48.656 million. Heavy volume pushing down looks more like panic selling is concentrated and being released.
Reference indicators: the 30m RSI is 20.28 and has entered oversold territory, suggesting short-term panic is already somewhat over. The 30m Super Trend is 0.152688, and the current price is above it—indicating the structure is still more trend-continuation oriented.
Bulls will watch whether panic sentiment has started to recover; the cautious crowd will watch whether the trend protection level can be reclaimed. If these two signals conflict, the market is likely to keep whipping around in the short term.
From here, there are two possible paths: one is recovery after panic has been fully released; the other is a low-volume dead-cat bounce that continues to drift lower. I’m not rushing to a conclusion—I’ll wait for the next round of volume to find out.
EPIC Which side are you on this wave: panic released, or weakness continuing?
EPIC past 24 hours: -24.48%. The pullback is deep. The key now isn’t how much it dropped, but whether the selling pressure is nearing its end. Current price is about 0.3382, with 24h trading volume of about 152 million. The increased volume pushing down looks more like a concentrated panic sell-off.
Reference indicators: 30m RSI 71.79 is already overheated, suggesting chase sentiment is somewhat full. The 30m Super Trend is 0.363580; the current price has fallen below the reference level, meaning the trend protection level is starting to come under pressure.
I’ll break the call into two votes: one to see whether panic sentiment has started to repair, and one to see whether the trend protection level can be reclaimed. Only if both votes are stable can it count as a repair; if only one is stable, then it’s still just range-bound movement.
In the comments, just say: are you expecting continuation, or a pullback?
AGLD: The most counterintuitive part of this pull-up— the hotter it gets, the more you can’t just focus on the size of the move.
In the past 24 hours, AGLD is up +25.82%, pushing sentiment to the high end. The key now isn’t how much it’s risen, but whether chasing funds can still hold the line. Current price is about 0.1836, with 24h trading volume of about 24.7942 million. A breakout on expanding volume is more consistent with trend-chasing capital.
Reference indicators: the 30m RSI is 70.56, already somewhat overheated, suggesting chase sentiment is quite full. The 30m Super Trend is 0.170600, and the current price is above it, indicating the structure leans toward trend continuation.
The real “liquidity” lies in the divergence: some think funds are huddling together, while others see near-term profit-taking. I’d rather watch whether the chasing sentiment has started to cool down. If it doesn’t, even if it stays hot, it’s easy for it to turn into a rally-then-fade.
At this kind of level, don’t rush to call direction. The next 30m candle is even more important.
YFI Where are you standing on this move: panic release, or continued weakness?
In the past 24 hours, YFI is down -19.96%. The drawdown is deep—what matters now is not how much it fell, but whether the selling pressure is nearing its end. The current price is about 2175, with a 24h trading volume of roughly 152 million. Increased volume pushing downward looks more like a concentrated release of panic selling.
Reference indicators: 30m Super Trend at 2248.400000. The current price has broken below the reference level, which suggests the trend support/“protection” area is starting to come under pressure. 30m KDJ is 31.04/26.65/39.84, indicating short-term disagreement is still in the middle zone.
I’ll break the assessment into two votes: one vote for whether the trend support/protection level can be reclaimed; the other for whether any short-term rebound has formed a second confirmation. Only when both votes are solid can we call it a repair; if only one holds, then it’s still a range-bound market.
In the comments, just say it directly: are you looking for continuation, or for a pullback?
GRASS currently has the most discussion not about the size of the drop, but about the disagreement.
In the past 24 hours, GRASS is down -22.57% with a deep pullback. The key point now isn’t how much it fell—it’s whether the selling pressure is nearing the end. The current price is around 0.4246, with 24h trading volume of about 21.73 million. Increased volume pushing downward looks more like panic orders concentrated and being released.
Reference indicators: the 30m RSI at 22.46 is already oversold, suggesting short-term panic is nearing its peak. The 30m Super Trend is at 0.450130; since the current price has broken below the reference level, it shows the trend support zone is starting to come under pressure.
The bulls will watch whether panic sentiment has begun to recover; the cautious crowd will watch whether the trend support can be reclaimed. If these two signals clash, the short-term price is likely to keep bouncing around.
Next, there are two possible paths: one is that after panic is fully released, it recovers; the other is a low-volume dead-cat bounce followed by continued weakness. I’m not rushing to draw conclusions—I’ll wait for the next round of trading volume to provide the answer.
When experienced traders look at TRIA, the first thing they don't check is the drawdown—it's whether, after the sudden selloff, the sell orders are still being thrown in.
Over the past 24 hours, TRIA is down -21.53%. The pullback is quite deep. The key now isn't how much it has fallen, but whether the selling pressure is nearing the end of its wave. Current price is about 0.02541, with roughly 73.7628 million in 24h trading volume. With volume expanding while prices are being pushed down, it looks more like a concentrated release of panic sell orders.
Reference indicators: The 30m RSI at 23.36 is already oversold, suggesting that short-term panic is close to being fully priced in. The 30m Super Trend at 0.027443—since the current price has broken below that reference level, it means the trend support zone is starting to come under pressure.
In the order book, you need to get two answers: whether panic sentiment has started to repair, and whether the trend support level can be reclaimed. If both are held, that’s what a repair looks like; if only one holds, then it’s still weak, range-bound churn.
For this kind of retracement, what really matters isn't how much it dropped, but whether the sell pressure is able to stop and whether the structure can be put back together.