Don't Misunderstand the Washing of Operators in the Coin Circle! The Truth is Far More Complex than 'Snatching Chips'
Many people have a deep-rooted misunderstanding of the washing behavior of operators in the coin circle, always thinking that operators smash the price to wash just to snatch chips from retail investors. In fact, the core purpose of washing goes far beyond this — it is more about reducing selling pressure and lowering operational costs in the subsequent price increase phase, ultimately achieving smooth selling and cashing out at high prices. Today, I will use a simple example to thoroughly explain the washing logic of operators in the coin circle.
Assuming a capital team (commonly known as 'operators') is eyeing a small-cap token called 'XX token', after research, they find: this token has a total issuance of 10 million, and its current circulation price on exchanges stabilizes around $1, with low project heat and scattered retail holdings, making it very suitable for price control.
I went all-in once before, but I didn't close my position immediately, and I only made about 3,000 U in the end. I'd better stop when I see a good profit. 🤐 #BTC #ETH
Last week I invested 200U, and the contract made it to 2000U in a few days I ask the experts to cool me down, this money can't be that easy to earn, right? #BTC #合约 #满仓