Been noticing a lot of people asking about spotting good entry points on crypto charts. Here's something that changed how I trade — understanding hidden bullish divergence and why it matters more than most traders realize.



So divergence is basically when price does one thing but your indicator does another. Classic divergence shows up at the end of a trend and warns you it's about to flip. But there's another type that's honestly more useful for catching moves early — hidden bullish divergence. This one appears during consolidation phases and signals the trend's about to continue, not reverse.

Let me break down what makes hidden bullish divergence different. You'll see price making a higher low while your indicator (RSI, MACD, Stochastic — pick your poison) is printing a lower low. That mismatch is the signal. It's telling you the selling pressure is weakening even though price hasn't broken out yet. I've seen this play out on Bitcoin and Ethereum charts countless times.

Here's the practical side: when I spot hidden bullish divergence on a chart, I'm looking at it within the context of the larger uptrend. If the bigger trend is up and I see this pattern, it's a buy signal. If I'm in a downtrend, I flip it — look for bearish hidden divergence as a sell signal. The key is filtering your trades to match the direction you're already in.

Technically, you can use any oscillator. I usually thicken the MACD line so it pops on my screen, or run the Stochastic with 15-5-5 settings. The setup is simple: price carves a higher low, indicator shows lower low. That divergence between them? That's your green light.

One thing I learned the hard way — timing is tricky. Hidden bullish divergence can be obvious in hindsight but frustrating in real-time because emotions cloud judgment. You see a small bounce and get excited thinking it's the move, then realize you're looking at a bearish setup instead. Keep emotions out of it.

When you do spot the pattern, don't just wing it. Place your stop loss just below the swing low where the signal triggered. Target at least twice your risk. So if you're risking 100, aim for 200. On shorter timeframes like 1-hour charts, this math works well.

The limitation nobody talks about: if hidden bullish divergence shows up late in a trend, most of the move is already done. You're entering at worse prices even if the signal is valid. Smaller altcoins also tend to be noisier — fewer buyers and sellers means the patterns aren't as clean as Bitcoin's.

But when you get it right and combine hidden bullish divergence with the larger trend direction, you catch some solid continuation moves. I've seen this pattern work on multiple timeframes consistently. The learning curve is real, but once it clicks, you'll spot these setups everywhere on crypto charts.
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