Looking at $DEXTER's chart, some limit orders are building buy support to absorb potential selling pressure. If you're considering opening a position or adjusting your liquidity mining range, this level offers a decent risk-reward ratio.
How to interpret? Limit orders are essentially trade triggers set within the DEX—when the price drops to your specified level, it automatically buys a predetermined amount of tokens. When these orders accumulate to form buy support, it acts like a barrier, effectively stabilizing price fluctuations. Especially when combined with DLMM (Dynamic Liquidity Market Making) adjustments to your price range, you can achieve more efficient capital utilization with a tighter scope.
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4am_degen
· 3h ago
The risk of breaking through really exists; even with so many limit orders stacked up, it may not be able to withstand it.
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GateUser-0717ab66
· 01-08 03:43
Wow, DEXTER's buying wave is stacking up a bit... but I'm still hesitant, I'll wait for it to break below before entering.
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RetailTherapist
· 01-07 08:44
Hi, I've seen too many tricks with limit order stacking. Whether it can truly support the market depends on whether big players are actually putting in real money.
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MEVHunterWang
· 01-07 08:36
Well, this buy order accumulation looks okay, but I think we still need to observe whether it can really hold up.
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AirdropHarvester
· 01-07 08:24
Hmm... I've heard the argument about buy orders piling up many times. How many times has it actually protected the market?
Looking at $DEXTER's chart, some limit orders are building buy support to absorb potential selling pressure. If you're considering opening a position or adjusting your liquidity mining range, this level offers a decent risk-reward ratio.
How to interpret? Limit orders are essentially trade triggers set within the DEX—when the price drops to your specified level, it automatically buys a predetermined amount of tokens. When these orders accumulate to form buy support, it acts like a barrier, effectively stabilizing price fluctuations. Especially when combined with DLMM (Dynamic Liquidity Market Making) adjustments to your price range, you can achieve more efficient capital utilization with a tighter scope.