Recently, I noticed that the brand popularity of a certain popular coin has decreased significantly. The impact of the major event before was profound, and the newly launched token not only lacks a premium but also shows a declining price on the trading pair, truly a "break of the issue."



I have a question: when pricing in the primary market, shouldn't more attention be paid to feedback from the secondary market? If the initial price exceeds market expectations too much, it can easily turn into a conversation with oneself later on.

The price in the secondary market, frankly, is the result of investors voting with their wallets, representing how much real money everyone is willing to put in. This vote never lies.

Conversely, tokens or assets that can be produced quickly and on a large scale are essentially not scarce at all. I can't understand why some people still speculate on these kinds of things, and I really can't understand why others are willing to pay several times the price to take over. Maybe this is the eternal mystery of the market.
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ContractCollectorvip
· 5h ago
Breaking below the price so aggressively, the pricing in the primary market is really outrageous. Wallet voting never lies, this statement hits the nail on the head. Still expecting things with infinite issuance to rise? You must have a really unclear mind.
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ForkThisDAOvip
· 01-08 20:50
Breaking below the price is because the people in the primary market set the pricing outrageously, and when it crashes in the secondary market, the truth is exposed immediately. Wallet voting never lies, this point is absolute. Scarcity is all fabricated; people still buy into quickly produced stuff, I really can't believe it. This round of the market has worn me out a bit; it feels like we're just speculating on air.
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FomoAnxietyvip
· 01-07 11:52
Still someone willing to buy after the break? Just for fun, I guess.
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NotGonnaMakeItvip
· 01-07 11:49
Wallets never lie; a dip is the most honest feedback the market can give This time, some people overestimated the project's pricing ability, and ended up playing themselves There's no point in speculating on something that lacks scarcity
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StrawberryIcevip
· 01-07 11:46
Breaking below the price can be acceptable once or twice, but after a while, it really becomes incomprehensible. The wallet will never lie, I need to remember this phrase. The people in the primary market set prices really outrageously, always just pushing them higher.
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ProofOfNothingvip
· 01-07 11:25
Breaking below the issue price is ultimately just a bunch of people in the primary market hyping themselves up. Can wallets lie? No. But human desires will always exist. The scarcity is all fabricated; people still chase after things that are rapidly printed, which is the most ridiculous. It's all a joke to watch, yet some people go crazy for it. I really don't understand.
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ImpermanentPhobiavip
· 01-07 11:24
Breaking below the price is indeed awkward; the primary pricing is completely detached from reality. Wallets never lie, that's no joke. If you ask me, those mass-produced coins should just fade away, and it's really outrageous that some people still buy into this.
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