Looking back at 2022's brutal downtrend, we saw a similar pattern play out—a bearish pennant that seemed to crack upward, price punching through the resistance with real conviction. Sounds bullish, right? Except what happened next tells a different story. That breakout fizzled fast, momentum died, and the entire market cap went into free fall.
The setup looked textbook perfect. Tightening consolidation, volume building, the breakout candle clearing overhead resistance. But rallies don't always mean recovery. Sometimes they're just the market shaking out weak longs before the real collapse begins.
From a technical standpoint, false breakouts above converging pennants have consistently been among the most punishing traps in crypto. You get the initial euphoria—traders rushing in, stops getting hunted—then the reversal. By the time most people realize what's happening, price is already well below the pattern's midpoint.
The question isn't whether we break higher or lower. It's whether we've learned to respect what happens after the break.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
6 Likes
Reward
6
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
AllInAlice
· 21h ago
Damn, isn't this the same old trick from 2022? Coming around again?
View OriginalReply0
StableNomad
· 21h ago
nah this is just 2022 vibes all over again... reminds me of UST in May, setup looked *perfect* until it didn't. statistically speaking those false breakouts hit different when you're holding bags
Reply0
MysteriousZhang
· 21h ago
Coming back with this again? I was caught once during that wave in 2022, breaking below and then rallying back up before falling again. Looking at this chart now, I still feel a bit uneasy.
View OriginalReply0
ChainDetective
· 21h ago
It's the same old pennant trick again. Having been fooled once in 2022, isn't that enough? I bet this is also a false breakout. Let's wait and see the retail investors get shaken out once more.
View OriginalReply0
DefiPlaybook
· 21h ago
Based on historical data, the characteristic data of the false breakout in 2022 is quite informative—volume artificially increased by 34% during the pennant convergence period, but momentum decayed by over 70% within 72 hours after the breakout. What does this indicate? First, the cost structure of stop-loss hunting determines the amplitude of oscillations; second, market depth data is often more honest than candlestick charts.
Breakout or trap? The squeeze is getting tighter.
Looking back at 2022's brutal downtrend, we saw a similar pattern play out—a bearish pennant that seemed to crack upward, price punching through the resistance with real conviction. Sounds bullish, right? Except what happened next tells a different story. That breakout fizzled fast, momentum died, and the entire market cap went into free fall.
The setup looked textbook perfect. Tightening consolidation, volume building, the breakout candle clearing overhead resistance. But rallies don't always mean recovery. Sometimes they're just the market shaking out weak longs before the real collapse begins.
From a technical standpoint, false breakouts above converging pennants have consistently been among the most punishing traps in crypto. You get the initial euphoria—traders rushing in, stops getting hunted—then the reversal. By the time most people realize what's happening, price is already well below the pattern's midpoint.
The question isn't whether we break higher or lower. It's whether we've learned to respect what happens after the break.