A leading asset management firm's Bitcoin ETF outflows have reached 2.7 billion, which we discussed three days ago.
Actually, it's normal for ETFs to have both inflows and outflows, and 2.7 billion isn't outrageous in the context of the whole market—it's not like they're just dumping; they're doing both buying and selling, it's just that net outflows are a bit higher. But when the price starts to drop, it's a different story. Panic spreads, even well-funded retail investors can't hold on, and there are plenty of people cutting their losses and following the trend.
Look at the data: on the 2nd, there was an inflow of 120 million, and on the 4th, there was an outflow of 113 million. Last week's outflows were indeed intense, but fortunately, the pace has eased a bit this week. That's just how the market goes—constant back and forth.
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ColdWalletAnxiety
· 12-12 14:24
2.7 billion is nothing, the key is this mentality—sell when it drops.
Retail investors are really the rule of the leek—buying high and selling low, losing the most.
The data is a slap in the face—buy on the 2nd, sell on the 4th, isn't that just chasing highs and killing lows?
Repeated tug-of-war? Honestly, it's institutions bleeding us dry.
Wait, is this slowdown real or the calm before the storm...
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SchrodingersPaper
· 12-12 13:47
2.7 billion is nothing, I sold three houses last week...
We agreed not to look at the K-line, but I still hesitated.
Large funds are fleeing, retail investors are still buying in, I've seen this script before.
It's starting again, ETF inflows and outflows are like a roller coaster.
If we can really stay steady, we'll win, but who can truly stay steady...
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LeverageAddict
· 12-09 15:24
2.7 billion really isn't that scary; the key issue is that retail investors have lost their nerve.
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People are starting to cut their losses again—this is just the fate of retail investors.
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Trading back and forth: institutions make money on the spread, retail investors lose their principal.
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Buy on the 2nd, sell on the 4th—this pace is faster than my cooking.
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Once panic spreads, everyone follows the crowd—you deserve to get harvested.
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So what if there's a lot of outflow? The big players already left before we even noticed.
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This back-and-forth tug-of-war is just disgusting, especially with wealthy people manipulating things.
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What's 2.7 billion? The real issue is the change in liquidity among the market's major players.
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Looking at this data logic, retail investors are going to have to cut their losses again this round.
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CommunityWorker
· 12-09 15:21
2.7 billion is nothing, it's just retail investors losing their nerve.
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Another ETF outflow, and every time people keep saying it's time to get out.
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Buy on the 2nd, sell on the 4th, this rhythm is just playing around.
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The real damage comes from spreading panic, while the big players are rock solid.
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Seeing this outflow, I can't help but feel someone is accumulating.
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Just keep pulling back and forth, let's keep tossing it around.
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There are quite a few panic sellers, can't hold on as soon as it drops.
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A 2.7 billion outflow isn't that big of a deal, but retail investors really do love to follow the crowd.
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For the whole market, this bit of volume is nothing.
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Every drop triggers an emotional explosion—this is the fate of retail investors.
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GhostInTheChain
· 12-09 15:16
What’s 2.7 billion? The whole pie is so much bigger. The real cause for panic isn’t the outflow itself—it’s the mindset of those retail investors panic-selling at a loss.
You’re still hung up on inflow and outflow data? I saw through this a long time ago. The market is just a repeated game of harvesting retail investors.
The pace slowed down this week? I think it’s just brewing for the next wave of a major plunge.
All this in and out is just whales feeding on the panic of small investors—same old routine.
A 2.7 billion outflow is quite a lot, but compared to the losses those trend-chasing retail sellers are taking, it’s really nothing.
A leading asset management firm's Bitcoin ETF outflows have reached 2.7 billion, which we discussed three days ago.
Actually, it's normal for ETFs to have both inflows and outflows, and 2.7 billion isn't outrageous in the context of the whole market—it's not like they're just dumping; they're doing both buying and selling, it's just that net outflows are a bit higher. But when the price starts to drop, it's a different story. Panic spreads, even well-funded retail investors can't hold on, and there are plenty of people cutting their losses and following the trend.
Look at the data: on the 2nd, there was an inflow of 120 million, and on the 4th, there was an outflow of 113 million. Last week's outflows were indeed intense, but fortunately, the pace has eased a bit this week. That's just how the market goes—constant back and forth.