The weekly chart's fall came so smoothly that it caught everyone off guard!
The price fell to around 80,000 before taking a breather, rebounding to 93,000 and hitting resistance, and then? Another round of retracement, directly dropping to 87,000. Let’s do the math: first giving you a 15% sweetener, then turning around and hitting you with a 7% blow. That waterfall in the morning probably left many people stunned.
This market situation validates a judgment – it is currently a rhythm of oscillation and bottoming out. In this back-and-forth tug of war, to survive, one must remember a few points: short-term is king, set up ambushes at low positions in advance, and take profits when they are good, don’t be greedy. Chasing highs? That’s just giving money to the market. Profits not taken will eventually be returned.
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MissedTheBoat
· 8h ago
Back to this again? I just want to ask, who the hell can accurately buy the dip when it goes from 80,000 to 93,000 and then falls back to 87,000? It's easy to say.
So short-term is king, huh? I bet five dumplings that most of you are just paying tuition fees for short-term trading.
This kind of market really tests your mentality; it’s not just talk.
Confused? I just fell asleep and woke up to see it drop.
I’ve said it long ago, don’t chase the price, but there are still people rushing in. I’m really impressed.
If you don’t take profits, it’s bound to go back; I’ve learned this through bloody lessons.
I’m tired of hearing about grinding the bottom; every time it’s said, what happens?
Short-term players are probably going to suffer Cut Loss again this time, the same old story.
It's easy to lie in ambush at low levels, but the key is whether you can hold back and not move.
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FarmHopper
· 8h ago
The morning wave completely stunned me, I lost money without being able to react.
Short-term trading is really like this, you need to run as soon as you make a bit of profit, greed leads to a bad outcome.
During the bottoming period, I really hate this range-bound situation, it breaks my mentality.
I actually chased the price at 93000, truly giving it away for free.
Lying in ambush at low positions sounds easy, but it's exhausting to actually operate.
87000 is back again, when will the real bottom be?
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NotGonnaMakeIt
· 9h ago
Another trap? I was optimistic in the morning, but then I got smashed.
This operation is really ruthless; I've fallen for the sweet-and-bitter play people for suckers several times already.
The profits that can be made in the short term have all been harvested by Large Investors, so us retail investors should just lie in ambush honestly.
Chasing the price really is just giving away money; I need to engrave the phrase "take the profit when it's good" in my mind.
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SmartContractRebel
· 9h ago
This again? First rise then fall, I think this is just the script for being played for suckers.
The weekly chart's fall came so smoothly that it caught everyone off guard!
The price fell to around 80,000 before taking a breather, rebounding to 93,000 and hitting resistance, and then? Another round of retracement, directly dropping to 87,000. Let’s do the math: first giving you a 15% sweetener, then turning around and hitting you with a 7% blow. That waterfall in the morning probably left many people stunned.
This market situation validates a judgment – it is currently a rhythm of oscillation and bottoming out. In this back-and-forth tug of war, to survive, one must remember a few points: short-term is king, set up ambushes at low positions in advance, and take profits when they are good, don’t be greedy. Chasing highs? That’s just giving money to the market. Profits not taken will eventually be returned.