#美联储回购协议计划 At 1 a.m., the market suddenly became lively in the rainy night.
$ZBT surged with volume on the 15-minute K-line, and people in the group couldn't sit still. "Can we chase this wave?" questions came one after another. But I didn't give a signal.
I only replied — rapid rise, slow fall, don't act yet. This kind of rhythm is not the right time for retail traders to jump in.
The next 40 minutes were very interesting. The price moved sideways within a range, and the trading volume gradually shrank. The order book looked quite "clean," but in fact, it was the market makers rotating hands, not the time to accept new entrants.
By the second pullback, trading volume became active again, and I finally said in the group — you can enter in batches, with stop-losses set in advance.
An hour later, the price moved up again. The difference was obvious: everyone didn't chase at the high point but entered when the market makers were re-accumulating. Someone experienced this feeling for the first time and told me, "I used to get trapped when chasing, but this time I actually held on."
This is not luck. It’s using the right logic.
Over the years of trading, high-profit techniques are not the key. The key is to repeatedly execute these principles: don’t get excited and chase during rapid rises, don’t gamble on a single K-line during quick drops, look at volume before price at high levels, and stay in cash at the bottom waiting — it seems conservative, but it has an advantage: it allows you to keep making money.
Tonight, someone made 500U, someone made 5000U. The amount isn’t the core. The core is that everyone finally understands a fact: making money doesn’t require risking everything, as long as you don’t stand opposite the market makers. The logic of the order book, the relationship between volume and price, risk management — these are the real things that can help you go far.
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EagleEye
· 7h ago
Thanks for sharing this insight, very helpful
Reply0
CryptoDouble-O-Seven
· 8h ago
This is true trading wisdom, not the approach of chasing highs and selling lows.
View OriginalReply0
TokenomicsPolice
· 8h ago
The relationship between price and volume is well explained, but this logic is still too abstract for beginners.
View OriginalReply0
ZenChainWalker
· 8h ago
There's nothing wrong with that; those who chase the high are all newbies.
View OriginalReply0
BackrowObserver
· 8h ago
Hmm... This theory sounds good, but how many actually make it out alive?
#美联储回购协议计划 At 1 a.m., the market suddenly became lively in the rainy night.
$ZBT surged with volume on the 15-minute K-line, and people in the group couldn't sit still. "Can we chase this wave?" questions came one after another. But I didn't give a signal.
I only replied — rapid rise, slow fall, don't act yet. This kind of rhythm is not the right time for retail traders to jump in.
The next 40 minutes were very interesting. The price moved sideways within a range, and the trading volume gradually shrank. The order book looked quite "clean," but in fact, it was the market makers rotating hands, not the time to accept new entrants.
By the second pullback, trading volume became active again, and I finally said in the group — you can enter in batches, with stop-losses set in advance.
An hour later, the price moved up again. The difference was obvious: everyone didn't chase at the high point but entered when the market makers were re-accumulating. Someone experienced this feeling for the first time and told me, "I used to get trapped when chasing, but this time I actually held on."
This is not luck. It’s using the right logic.
Over the years of trading, high-profit techniques are not the key. The key is to repeatedly execute these principles: don’t get excited and chase during rapid rises, don’t gamble on a single K-line during quick drops, look at volume before price at high levels, and stay in cash at the bottom waiting — it seems conservative, but it has an advantage: it allows you to keep making money.
Tonight, someone made 500U, someone made 5000U. The amount isn’t the core. The core is that everyone finally understands a fact: making money doesn’t require risking everything, as long as you don’t stand opposite the market makers. The logic of the order book, the relationship between volume and price, risk management — these are the real things that can help you go far.