Last year saw Russia accumulating assets at unprecedented levels, yet converting those holdings into actual profits proved far more challenging than anticipated. The mismatch between acquisition volume and successful monetization reveals deeper market constraints—liquidity bottlenecks, price sensitivity during large liquidations, and timing pressures all conspired to compress margins. When massive asset blocks hit the market simultaneously, buyers demand deeper discounts, and the window for optimal exit pricing narrows fast. This classic pattern mirrors what institutional players often face: owning assets and profiting from them are two entirely different games.
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MetaverseVagabond
· 01-24 03:34
Stockpiling piles up high, only when selling do you realize how difficult it is.
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DegenDreamer
· 01-22 19:40
ngl that's why all in doesn't mean profit, the on-paper numbers are very misleading...
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NFTregretter
· 01-21 11:58
Accumulating a bunch and ending up losing money—that's the norm in the crypto world.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 01-21 11:53
Stockpiling piles up, but selling is the real challenge... This is the true picture of Russia last year, isn't it?
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ThatsNotARugPull
· 01-21 11:48
Haha, that's why I always say it's easy to accumulate coins but hard to sell, brother.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 01-21 11:40
This is a typical symptom of supply lines being cut. No matter how much you stockpile, it's useless; the key is how you make your move.
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DeepRabbitHole
· 01-21 11:39
Basically, it's just that holding more makes it hard to sell... Liquidity is indeed a huge pit.
Last year saw Russia accumulating assets at unprecedented levels, yet converting those holdings into actual profits proved far more challenging than anticipated. The mismatch between acquisition volume and successful monetization reveals deeper market constraints—liquidity bottlenecks, price sensitivity during large liquidations, and timing pressures all conspired to compress margins. When massive asset blocks hit the market simultaneously, buyers demand deeper discounts, and the window for optimal exit pricing narrows fast. This classic pattern mirrors what institutional players often face: owning assets and profiting from them are two entirely different games.