Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Pre-IPOs
Unlock full access to global stock IPOs
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Technical indicators are giving conflicting signals, which precisely reflects the current market's true state.
Let's look at the numbers first. The daily RSI has soared to 81.5, and the 4-hour chart also shows 75. This is an obvious overbought signal in the crypto world—prices have surged too rapidly, and a short-term pullback could happen at any time. From conventional indicators, this is a time to be cautious.
But here’s the problem: other indicators are not cooperating. The MACD golden cross is still intact, and the histogram is still extending upward, indicating that the bullish momentum has not yet waned. Even more concerning is the ADX trend strength indicator, which from the 1-hour to the daily chart has all broken through 25, with the daily even reaching 67. This data can only mean one thing—**there is an extremely strong unilateral upward trend right now, not a sideways consolidation**.
This is where the contradiction lies. The overbought signals are shouting "be careful and exit," but the trend indicators are saying "the trend isn’t over." This opposition actually reveals the true face of the market—an irrationally strong state. Capital is piling in frantically, sentiment is fermenting continuously, and rational analysis is temporarily ineffective.
**So, what should we do?** Mindlessly chasing the high is definitely not an option; the risk is just too great. But missing out completely is also hard to accept, especially since the momentum of this wave is still there.
The prudent approach is—**give up chasing the high and wait for a decent pullback**. Maintain the mindset of "not chasing rabbits until they appear."
The ideal entry zone is around the support of the key moving averages on the 1-hour and 4-hour charts, roughly between 0.1065 and 0.0956. If the price drops to this range and shows signs of stabilization (such as long lower shadows or a rebound after volume contraction), then it’s more reasonable to consider small positions for long entries. Place stop-loss orders below 0.0950, so if the judgment is wrong, the losses remain manageable.
If the price keeps refusing to deepen the correction and instead consolidates sideways at high levels, then better to wait rather than force a position. Missing a wave of market movement is not the end of the world, but getting caught in a wrong entry at the wrong time is truly painful. This time can be seen as an opportunity to nurture patience and risk awareness.
Wait for the pullback, brother. I'm waiting too; stay calm.
You're right, rational analysis has failed. Now it's just a game of throwing a tantrum.
I've seen many people get burned by rushing in, so it's better to be patient and wait for that 0.1065 level.
If this wave can rise to this level, the subsequent pullback will have to be fierce. That's when the real opportunity will come.
I think the same way about waiting for a pullback, just afraid that the pullback won't come and you'll be pushed back to the original position.
Contradictory signals are actually the market manipulators testing the waters, and the bulls still have some strength left.
Rather than chasing highs, it's better to stick to stop-losses. Don't force it below 0.0950.
The rhythm of this wave of market is really strange, it feels like rationality has already taken a holiday.
Waiting for a pullback is really the hardest part, but it’s necessary; otherwise, you’re just giving away money.
When indicators clash like this, it’s the most annoying. The promised one-sided move? Turns out to be an overbought trap.
I’ve noted the range from 0.1065 to 0.0956. If it really drops to this level, I’ll try a small position.
Honestly, I’d rather miss out than get trapped. I’ll just treat this as paying tuition.
Funds are piling up crazily—that’s the true reflection of the market. Rational analysis? I’ve long thrown that out.
Wait for the correction, no rush for now.
RSI is already at 81 and you're still chasing? That's just giving away money.