@SignOfficial The writing project has not yet finished, the price has dropped significantly, and a large group of people has started to panic!
I took a glance at the market, and SIGN is indeed quite miserable today, dropping nearly 30% in 24 hours, crashing from 0.048 to around 0.033.
But when I looked at the capital flow, I found something interesting—
The large orders are net inflows and are positive.
Today, large orders bought 374 million $SIGN , sold 188 million, with a net inflow of 185 million. Medium and small orders are also net inflows, adding up to over 850 million.
The price is falling, but the big players are buying. Liquidity is kicking in!
Looking at the net inflow of the main force over the past 5 days, it is more than -64 million, indicating that large funds have indeed retreated in the past few days. But in today’s 30% drop, large orders are actually coming back.
Two possibilities: someone is propping up the market, or someone is accumulating shares.
I lean towards the second one. The value anchors of SIGN are the Middle Eastern sovereign funds, institutional-level businesses, and compliance evidence chains—these are slow variables. Holders of such assets will not panic because of a 30% drop in one day.
Why did it drop today? It could be due to the overall market or profit-taking. But the key point is: the ones who were dumping have left, and the ones taking over are those holding a large number of chips.
In the short term, prices follow emotions. But if you believe in the long-term logic of $SIGN , this position might actually be worth a second look.
The data of large net inflows in one day doesn't indicate much, but at least it reminds me of one thing: some people remain calm during a panic.
Personal opinion, not investment advice.

