$TAG after the flash crash: the quick fill-back is even more worth watching than the rebound itself.
The tagger has just gone through a needle-like dip, but there hasn’t been sustained sell pressure in the order book. The price quickly returned to around $0.00085, with market cap steady at 91.67M and 24h volume at 2.29M. This “hammer it down and still catch it” pattern usually indicates there are real buy orders absorbing below—not just emotion-driven selling.
From the chart structure, a few points stand out:
First, the flash crash didn’t break key support levels, so the panic sell orders were quickly digested;
Second, the fill-back process came with increased trading volume, suggesting active capital entering—not a low-volume dead-cat bounce;
Third, market attention was passively pulled upward, and in the short term, content may form a second-round battle window.
Short-term approach: treat the flash-crash low as the stop-loss reference. If the pullback doesn’t break, it keeps a bullish structure; if it breaks, then price returns to a range-bound logic. For the mid-term, we still need to see whether the overall capital rotation in the io_flow track continues. A single rebound doesn’t equal a trend reversal—don’t confuse momentum with direction.
Timing matters more than direction. Only the coins that get caught can lead to the next leg of the market.
#Tagger #io_flow