$WLFI's recent popularity has clearly increased, with narrative and funding attention both warming up. But for on-chain traders, just looking at whether the market is being pumped is far from enough. What truly matters is— which wallets are moving, where the funds are coming from, and where they are flowing to. Most importantly, whether this capital can be sustained.
By monitoring changes in on-chain wallet addresses and tracking the inflows and outflows of funds, one can judge the authenticity of this market movement. Not every price increase is worth following; it depends on whether the underlying funding logic is solid.
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RamenDeFiSurvivor
· 01-13 16:53
That's right, just looking at price fluctuations can easily get you liquidated. You need to analyze who's buying; if the source of funds is unclear, following the trend is just asking for trouble.
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This kind of analysis is the real deal. Most people only look at candlestick charts and guess blindly, not realizing that a single move by a whale can determine the subsequent trend.
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For $WLFI, it depends on the distribution of holdings. Are the whales still adding positions, or have they quietly started selling? This will determine how long the price can rise.
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Fundamental continuity is the key. What's the point of a quick pump and dump? Sooner or later, it will fall back.
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Those who understand on-chain analysis know that wallet addresses don't lie. It's much more reliable than listening to self-media hype.
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The problem is that most retail investors don't have tools to view this data; they can only follow the crowd and gamble.
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If $WLFI doesn't have institutional or large holder continuous inflows, no matter how hot the hype is, it will eventually cool off.
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DegenMcsleepless
· 01-13 16:46
It's easy to push the market up, but maintaining the funds continuously is difficult... It depends on whether big players are taking over or retail investors are holding the bag; that's the real dividing line.
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RiddleMaster
· 01-13 16:24
Exactly right, retail investors only look at candlesticks, while true players have been monitoring wallet addresses. If big players start dumping WLFI now, it's game over.
$WLFI's recent popularity has clearly increased, with narrative and funding attention both warming up. But for on-chain traders, just looking at whether the market is being pumped is far from enough. What truly matters is— which wallets are moving, where the funds are coming from, and where they are flowing to. Most importantly, whether this capital can be sustained.
By monitoring changes in on-chain wallet addresses and tracking the inflows and outflows of funds, one can judge the authenticity of this market movement. Not every price increase is worth following; it depends on whether the underlying funding logic is solid.