Looking at the BEAT market trend, the interesting part is the tug-of-war between bulls and bears. From a technical perspective, the 1.5 level is definitely worth paying attention to—investors who are falling are likely to stop out around this area. Looking upward, even if the price rises to the high of 3, there are quite realistic issues: many long positions that are trapped earlier will find it difficult to fully exit, and instead become the subsequent buyers. The higher the price pushes up, the greater the selling pressure, which is actually a test for a market that wants to break through. From a different angle, the selling pressure at high levels is often harder to control than at low levels, especially when there are a large number of trapped orders that need to be released. The entire logical chain is very clear: as the price rises, more trapped positions are accumulated, and the difficulty of maintaining the trend is right there.
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ForkTongue
· 01-06 10:51
If 1.5 can't be broken, you'll have to wait a bit longer. This accumulation of holdings is really a hot potato.
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GateUser-0717ab66
· 01-05 05:56
1.5 is the line for cutting leeks; anyone who pushes above it will get caught and die.
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PaperHandSister
· 01-04 17:52
This is a typical high-position trap dilemma, where the trapped bulls are more pressing than how much they can push higher.
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FantasyGuardian
· 01-04 17:42
1.5 is really a hurdle, but 3 is even more difficult, with too many trapped positions.
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GateUser-e87b21ee
· 01-04 17:41
If you can't hold 1.5, it will directly break a new low. This wave of BEAT is really a hot potato.
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orphaned_block
· 01-04 17:34
1.5 at this level is really a trap, with too many trapped positions.
Looking at the BEAT market trend, the interesting part is the tug-of-war between bulls and bears. From a technical perspective, the 1.5 level is definitely worth paying attention to—investors who are falling are likely to stop out around this area. Looking upward, even if the price rises to the high of 3, there are quite realistic issues: many long positions that are trapped earlier will find it difficult to fully exit, and instead become the subsequent buyers. The higher the price pushes up, the greater the selling pressure, which is actually a test for a market that wants to break through. From a different angle, the selling pressure at high levels is often harder to control than at low levels, especially when there are a large number of trapped orders that need to be released. The entire logical chain is very clear: as the price rises, more trapped positions are accumulated, and the difficulty of maintaining the trend is right there.