The following knowledge point is extremely practical and often encountered:
When encountering a coin with a large decline in volume at a relatively or absolutely low position, should you throw it away, keep it, or add to your position?
When the market maker enters the market to pull up and induce retail investors to chase the rise, the coin will definitely experience at least one large decline in volume at a high position, commonly known as a market crash, the purpose of which is to wash out the profit-making positions that have been ambushed at low positions and held at high positions, and the trend will reverse upward after the market crash.
And when the coin is already at a relatively low or absolute low position, what is the purpose of the sudden large decline in volume?
Just grasp one point: except for sudden strong negative news, the market crash with a large decline in volume (extremely unified selling orders) at any position is almost certainly the behavior of the market maker.
The market maker creates a trend of large decline in volume at a relatively or absolutely low position, and uses the last wave of prehistoric power to completely clean up the trapped positions of the retail investors who chase the rise at high positions and the countless blind bottom-fishing during the gradual downward shock, and then reverses upward after washing.
Therefore, when you encounter a coin that suddenly shrinks in volume and has a large drop in price at a relative or absolute low level, be determined not to be washed out, and victory will be at hand.