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Yesterday's trend, although it experienced a slight pullback, the overall net change was not significant. This indicates that at this stage, large funds are not overly involved; instead, they are primarily opening positions first and then allowing the price to naturally decline, forming a proactive adjustment trend.
Many people ask: all four parts show positive net inflows, why is the price still falling? There is actually a trick here. From a numerical perspective, this is indeed the result of a 24-hour battle between bulls and bears. Positive values themselves are not problematic, but the key lies in the process details—especially the actions of whales at critical points. They often use very small forces to create gaps at certain levels, which can trigger panic selling among retail investors. Once the sell orders are executed, they buy back at lower levels. This cycle repeats until the price drops to their psychological price level.
Therefore, looking solely at the positive or negative sign of net inflow is not very meaningful. What truly matters is the scale of these values, especially the change in whale addresses. When whale net inflows again exceed a few thousand coins, that is an important signal—only then is it a time to be truly alert and prepared to follow up.