Interesting observation: the snowball effect typically manifests during downtrends, but rarely triggers on upward momentum. Worth monitoring whether this pattern holds as market cycles evolve.
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DataBartender
· 5h ago
When it falls, the snowball gets bigger and bigger, but why does it stop when it rises? This contrast.
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DeFiDoctor
· 5h ago
The phenomenon of the snowball effect sounds simple, but the actual diagnosis records show that the problems go far beyond the surface—it's easy to trigger during a fall, but goes silent during a rebound, indicating that the risk warning mechanism of market participants is fundamentally asymmetric. We need to dig deeper into the complications of liquidity indicators; otherwise, this pattern change will inevitably lead to losses.
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LadderToolGuy
· 5h ago
It seems that the market panics and blindly follows the trend when it falls, but is more cautious when it rises. This logic is really interesting.
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HallucinationGrower
· 5h ago
When the market falls, the snowball rolls quickly, but why does it cool off during the rebound?
Interesting observation: the snowball effect typically manifests during downtrends, but rarely triggers on upward momentum. Worth monitoring whether this pattern holds as market cycles evolve.