#Strategy加仓比特币 After trading for a while, I have a feeling: the real moment to lose money is often not during the fierce decline, but rather when the price looks pretty good and the market seems quite stable. This is when problems are most likely to occur.
Before the main force quietly pulls out, two obvious signs will appear.
**First: High-volume trading at high levels, but the price doesn’t follow** After the coin price reaches a new high, a phenomenon suddenly occurs—there’s fierce buying and significantly increased trading volume, but the price can’t go higher. Then it starts to jump up and down, sometimes pushing higher, sometimes crashing down. This is actually large investors cashing out in batches, while also enticing retail traders to keep buying in. They deliberately manipulate the price to create a false impression of normal shakeouts, trapping one after another.
**Second, more subtle sign: The closer to the top, the more intense the market looks** It sounds counterintuitive, but it’s the reality. To fully distribute chips, it takes time and patience, so the main force continues to push up, create new highs, and stimulate chasing the high. On the surface, the coin price repeatedly hits new highs with great momentum, but if you look at indicators like RSI or MACD, they have already dulled or weakened, forming a classic bearish divergence. This "strength" is actually a carefully scripted act, with the core purpose of unloading.
Remember these two details: if you see the coin repeatedly hitting high levels but unable to break through, or the price hits new highs while technical indicators lag behind, it’s time to sound the alarm. A lively market doesn’t necessarily mean true prosperity; the main force may already have one foot out the door.
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ClassicDumpster
· 9h ago
Ah, this is what I often call the "high-volume trap," someone always falls for it every time haha
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ForkItAll
· 9h ago
It's the same story again. High trading volume at the top, but the price can't go up? I'm so damn tired of this. Every time, it's the same cut.
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AllInDaddy
· 10h ago
It's the same story again. High trading volume at the top, but the price can't go up? I was tricked by this move last year. Now, seeing this kind of trend, I immediately cut my position and run.
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SandwichTrader
· 10h ago
High volume at the top but no rise? That's an old trick. I was cut like this a few years ago, and now as soon as I see this signal, I bail.
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GateUser-e19e9c10
· 10h ago
Oh no, it's that old trick of dumping at high prices again. Retail investors really need to wake up.
#Strategy加仓比特币 After trading for a while, I have a feeling: the real moment to lose money is often not during the fierce decline, but rather when the price looks pretty good and the market seems quite stable. This is when problems are most likely to occur.
Before the main force quietly pulls out, two obvious signs will appear.
**First: High-volume trading at high levels, but the price doesn’t follow**
After the coin price reaches a new high, a phenomenon suddenly occurs—there’s fierce buying and significantly increased trading volume, but the price can’t go higher. Then it starts to jump up and down, sometimes pushing higher, sometimes crashing down. This is actually large investors cashing out in batches, while also enticing retail traders to keep buying in. They deliberately manipulate the price to create a false impression of normal shakeouts, trapping one after another.
**Second, more subtle sign: The closer to the top, the more intense the market looks**
It sounds counterintuitive, but it’s the reality. To fully distribute chips, it takes time and patience, so the main force continues to push up, create new highs, and stimulate chasing the high. On the surface, the coin price repeatedly hits new highs with great momentum, but if you look at indicators like RSI or MACD, they have already dulled or weakened, forming a classic bearish divergence. This "strength" is actually a carefully scripted act, with the core purpose of unloading.
Remember these two details: if you see the coin repeatedly hitting high levels but unable to break through, or the price hits new highs while technical indicators lag behind, it’s time to sound the alarm. A lively market doesn’t necessarily mean true prosperity; the main force may already have one foot out the door.