Stripping out all institutional inflows doesn't change much—retail participants still represent over 70% of total demand right now. Sounds bullish, except here's the catch: we're operating in a demand desert by historical standards. The real bottleneck isn't buyers; it's the supply side, which has contracted meaningfully. Part of the reason? Existing institutional positions are locking up available assets. At its core, this market dynamic stems from the current rate environment.
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MEV_Whisperer
· 01-08 00:02
Retail investors make up 70%, seeming like a bull market, but in reality it's just an illusion... Supply is the real bottleneck.
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0xTherapist
· 01-08 00:02
Retail investors are holding the scene, but the market is just out of stock; institutions are hoarding.
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ColdWalletGuardian
· 01-07 23:59
Retail investors make up 70%, looking bullish, but the actual demand is really weak. Historically, it's just not comparable.
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MemeTokenGenius
· 01-07 23:58
Retail investors support 70% of the demand, sounds impressive, but this is a trap... supply is the real bottleneck.
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FOMOSapien
· 01-07 23:49
Retail investors make up 70%, which sounds good, but to be honest, it's just a lack of liquidity; institutions are hoarding.
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P2ENotWorking
· 01-07 23:35
Retail investors account for 70%, which sounds good, but frankly, we are currently out of stock; institutions have already locked in the chips.
Stripping out all institutional inflows doesn't change much—retail participants still represent over 70% of total demand right now. Sounds bullish, except here's the catch: we're operating in a demand desert by historical standards. The real bottleneck isn't buyers; it's the supply side, which has contracted meaningfully. Part of the reason? Existing institutional positions are locking up available assets. At its core, this market dynamic stems from the current rate environment.