“In an X post, a respected pseudonymous crypto analyst said he bought a HYPE spot position under $34 and would “load up” closer to $28 amid a market downtrend.”, — write: www.coindesk.com
In his Oct. 17 post, he wrote that he “nibbled” on spot HYPE below $34, filling about 20% of the position he ultimately wants. Spot means he bought the token itself without leverage, which removes the risk of forced liquidations. He said he’d “load up” nearer $28 and “go hard” sub-$30, a scale in approach that places buys across levels instead of committing all capital at once.
The setup, he stressed, sits inside a broader downtrend. By “lower highs,” he means each rebound is failing beneath the prior peak — a classic bearish structure that often resolves with another leg down. When he says there’s a “broken market structure,” he’s pointing to damaged support zones and thin order books after last week’s volatility, conditions that can exaggerate moves and produce whipsaws. The takeaway: keep size small, avoid trying to nail an exact bottom, and assume dips can overshoot.
Pentoshi also flagged a potential supply overhang from an unstaking queue. On networks that allow staking, previously locked tokens are periodically unlocked; if a chunk of those coins is sold rather than retaken, short-term sell pressure can rise. He said he doesn’t know whether a quarter, a third, or less will hit the market, so he’s leaving resting bids below the current price and letting the market come to him instead of chasing strength.
He added that a recent ether trade that strayed from his rules “burnt” him a bit — even if a bounce helped — so he’s playing defense: smaller sizing, pre-set bids, and minimal micromanagement of this position in the near term.
Hyperliquid is a decentralized exchange that runs on its own chain and is used mainly for perpetual futures — derivatives with no expiration. Its token, HYPE, serves as both governance and economic stake: holders can vote on upgrades, stake for rewards, and benefit from mechanisms that link trading activity and fees to the token’s value. In short: Hyperliquid is the venue; HYPE is how users share in its growth.
According to CoinDesk Data, just prior to publishing time, HYPE was around $36.32, up 2.1% in the past 24 hours.

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Six hacker wallets dumped ETH during the Oct. 10 market crash, then rebought at higher prices, amplifying losses.
- Six hacker wallets lost $13.4 million trading ETH during the Oct. 10 crypto market crashes.
- Hackers sold ETH at the local bottom, then repurchased at higher prices after markets rebounded.
- The losses suggest poor trading strategies or a rushed attempt to launder illicit funds.
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