#美联储重启降息步伐 Last night, an experienced player shared some notes in the group, and within half an hour, they were drowned out by new messages. Clearly, everyone wants to figure out: what game are the big players really playing?



Let's talk about something practical today—I’ve been watching K-line charts for three years and discovered a truth: K-lines aren’t just simple signals for price rises or falls; they’re more like a “codebook” left by the main funds. Want to predict the future with candlestick charts? That’s nonsense. But if you can decode these three signals, at least you won’t be the one getting cut like a chump, and if you’re lucky, you might even get a piece of the action.

**Signal 1: The Fake Breakdown**

The price suddenly breaks through a key support level, comment sections go crazy, and retail investors panic-sell. The result? The big players quietly scoop up positions at the bottom, and before the close, the price climbs back above support. I’ve seen this play out too many times.

How do you spot it? Watch the 1-hour chart closely: if the price dips below support but closes back above, there’s an 80% chance it’s just shaking out weak hands. Also check the volume—if it spikes on the drop but shrinks on the rebound, it means the big players are trading with themselves, putting on a show for you.

**Signal 2: Be Alert When Price and Volume Diverge**

If the price hits a new high but trading volume drops sharply, that’s called a “hollow rally.” I’ve been burned by this on a hot coin before—watched my profits evaporate, and even ended up with a loss.

The opposite also holds true: if the price is flat but volume suddenly surges, it’s likely the big players are quietly accumulating. Remember this rule: healthy moves need price and volume to rise together. When they diverge, it’s either a trap or a turning point.

**Signal 3: Lingering at the Top Means Exit Prep**

Sideways action doesn’t mean resting—it’s actually “dividing the cake.” At the bottom, if sideways movement comes with moderate volume growth and red candles are quickly eaten by green, that’s accumulation. But at the top, it’s different: volume gradually shrinks, red candles slowly consume green, and open interest keeps climbing? A storm is coming—it’s time to reduce your holdings.

To put it simply, K-lines are useful, but the core is to read the intentions of the big funds: are they shaking out weak hands or unloading positions? Accumulating or pumping? If you decode these three signals, the market is like a movie with subtitles—you can pretty much guess where the plot is going.

Trading is essentially psychological warfare. If you understand what your opponent wants before you act, you’ll survive a lot longer.
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CoinGuiyuanvip
· 15h ago
What would you like to do next?
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tokenomics_truthervip
· 16h ago
Same old rhetoric... I just want to ask, why have these three signals of yours never saved me at the top?
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ZenMinervip
· 16h ago
This theory sounds pretty solid, but when it comes to actual trading, it’s still easy to get rekt... I just want to ask, how do you use these three signals on the 5-minute K-line chart?
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