Last week I saw a trader confidently post that if $SIREN reaches $0.75,$1, they’ll be rich.
That kind of thinking is everywhere in crypto. A single price target becomes the plan, and suddenly the trade is less about risk and more about imagining life after the pump.
But look closer at what’s really happening. When people anchor their expectations to a round number like $0.75 or $1 for $SIREN, they’re not analyzing liquidity, market cap expansion, or how much new capital actually needs to enter the $BNB ecosystem to push it there. They’re just projecting a future payday. If a token sits far below that range, reaching $1 might require multiples of its current valuation and sustained buying pressure that rarely appears when retail is already dreaming about it.
The trap is psychological. Once traders lock onto a target, they stop planning exits, ignore volatility, and hold through obvious distribution because “$1 is coming.” Meanwhile early buyers quietly scale out while late entrants keep buying the dream.
So the real question isn’t whether $SIREN can reach $1. It’s how many people would still be holding if it got halfway there.
What do you think happens first: profit taking or the push to that $1 narrative?