$USUAL is getting closer to official trading. Through observation and analysis over the past couple of days, I expect this coin to have 5 trading trends. If anyone has more insights, feel free to leave a comment for discussion.
The first trend: the dealer directly pulls up with a strong bullish candlestick. All sell-off pressures are absorbed, heading straight above 3U. Retail investors are excited, and the last entrants successfully find their way to the table.
The second trend: when official trading opens, let the free airdrop participants or low-buyers sell off. Initially, there is no intervention; when the price stops falling, suddenly intervene to quickly absorb the low chips, and then pull up violently.
The third trend: the dealer directly crashes the price violently, causing weak holders to panic sell their chips, followed by a violent pull-up. Due to the unwillingness of panic sellers, they chase the rise. The dealer crashes the price violently again, and after several repetitions, the dealer leaves. The ups and downs are determined by the market. After a few days, at the low point of volatility, the dealer suddenly intervenes and pulls up violently, leaving the onlookers confused.
The fourth trend: while hitting, the dealer pulls up, stopping and starting, consuming several days or even half a month, causing most retail investors to lose patience and throw out their chips. The dealer takes the opportunity to absorb low-priced chips and is not in a hurry to pull up. After a few days of calm, amidst the joyful emotions of early exiting retail investors who are glad they ran fast, the dealer suddenly intervenes violently, heading straight above 5U. Retail investors see such a rising trend and buy in again, successfully taking over the position, while the dealer exits, leaving behind wails.
The fifth trend: let the market trade freely, with key points intervening to guide market fluctuations, secretly profiting amidst the volatility. A small number of retail investors make money, while most lose money. At the same time, everyone praises the dealer's conscience, blaming themselves for not seizing the opportunity. The profit-makers are exuberant, while the losers wear sorrowful expressions.