#fogo $FOGO Listings have a funny way of rewriting expectations. People often imagine a clean breakout or a steady climb, but short-term price action rarely behaves that politely. Right after a listing, price tends to swing harder than logic would suggest. Not because the asset suddenly changed, but because the crowd did.

In the first few hours, volume spikes sharply. Data from recent listings on platforms like Binance and Coinbase shows that a large share of trades come from short-term participants. These are traders reacting to order book gaps, early liquidity imbalances, and social hype rather than fundamentals. Momentum indicators light up quickly, then cool off just as fast.

What’s interesting is how inconsistent the follow-through can be. Some assets see a 20–40% move in the opening session, then retrace most of it within a day. Others chop sideways for hours, trapping both early buyers and aggressive shorts. Listings on OKX over the past year showed that high initial volume doesn’t always translate into sustained direction. Sometimes it just means more noise.

Momentum signals help, but only in context. A rising RSI during the first hour can look convincing, then fail once early liquidity providers step back. Funding rates, spread behavior, and how quickly volume normalizes tend to say more than a single candle ever will.

The takeaway is not bullish or bearish. It’s practical. Listings amplify emotion, compress timeframes, and reward those who stay flexible. Short-term swings are common. Clean trends are optional. Understanding that difference matters more than predicting the first move.@Fogo Official $SOL $ESP