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#数字资产市场动态 Last year on this day in Hangzhou, I witnessed a "daydream" about making money — no insider info, no luck involved, all built from three simple "foolproof tactics." Let me break it down for you; learning even a little bit can be profitable. $LN
**First Tactic: Rapid Rise, Slow Pullback — The Big Players Are Behind Your Back Accumulating Chips**
A large bullish candle drops, but the pullback feels like sinking into a swamp, one step back for every move forward. Don’t interpret this as weakness — someone is controlling the rhythm, secretly accumulating chips. Once your mindset collapses, those chips will end up in someone else’s pocket.
Remember this: as long as the trend line isn’t broken, even if the ceiling collapses, you can still lie back and win. If you really want to reduce your position, wait until your heartbeat soars past 90.
**Second Tactic: Sharp Drop, Weak Rebound — Not a Golden Pit, But a Burial Pit**
From a high point, a cliff dive occurs, but the rebound can’t even reach halfway up the mountain. Trading volume shrinks repeatedly, becoming meaningless.
Don’t be brainwashed by the word "cheap" — shrinking volume at the bottom often indicates a cellar. Simple rule: if the previous low is broken and volume remains sluggish, get out immediately. Those who throw the flying knives are often missing a finger.
**Third Tactic: Trading Volume Is a Spirit-Detecting Mirror — All Rise and Fall Without Volume Are Illusions**
A sudden surge in volume at a high level? It might be new main players taking over, still completing the switch of the market maker; low volume at a high level? It indicates buying has dried up, and the decline is just waiting for a time gap.
Volume at the bottom is the real signal. But don’t foolishly follow the first wave — "One burst of energy, then decline, and finally exhaustion," the third move is the real opportunity to take over.
The iron law is clear: any breakout without volume support is just playing dirty. $NB
**Ultimate Secret: Your Heartbeat Is Your Stop-Loss Line**
Greed, fear, panic — these three are the sharpest sickles in the market. The candlesticks jump before your eyes, news floods the air, all just stage drums and gongs. The real decisive factor is whether the body behind the screen can stay calm.
Embed your strategy into muscle memory, mute your emotions. The market always rolls on, but only those whose heartbeat stays below 60 can survive to the next cycle.
Most people are tossing and turning in the waves of rise and fall every day, not because they lose to the market, but because they lose those ten minutes — the ten minutes of dry throat, sweaty palms, and blank mind.
Here’s the light — whether you can illuminate your own path depends on whether you’re willing to open your eyes. The market always offers opportunities, but your capital and the number of mistakes you can afford are limited. Using systematic thinking to navigate the investment fog is far more valuable than blindly rushing in.
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It's that psychological construction theory again. It sounds good to listen to, but how many actually apply it?
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I've tried the move of bottoming out with reduced volume, but it turns out there's a basement below the cellar, and I lost big.
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Not breaking the trend line means lying win? Bro, why is your trend line drawn so ridiculously?
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The third restart sounds reliable, but by the third time, the principal is already gone.
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The most heartbreaking part is those ten minutes. Really, every time, the crash happens during those ten minutes.
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I agree that volume is a true mirror, but who can see through the illusion to the truth behind it?
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Last year today, I was also in Hangzhou, but my direction was completely opposite, and that was awkward.
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The main force is accumulating chips behind the scenes, while I'm cutting losses upfront. That's our CP combo.
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Relying on systematic thinking to cut through the fog? Systematic to the end, but still can't outsmart human nature.
Volume is the real daddy; any rebound without volume is just a trick to get you to get cut.
I've heard this theory many times, but the key is that during execution, emotions still crush you.
When volume shrinks and hits bottom, it's really a cellar down there. My fingertips are just that lacking.
Talking about "below 60 beats per minute" is easy, but in actual operation, you just can't stay calm.
So basically, making money boils down to two words—patience. Most people can't wait.
Volume-based rebounds are really a trap; I was caught in one last year.
When the mentality collapses, everything is pointless, and I agree with that.
Volume is the key; any rise without volume is fake. No matter how much you emphasize this, it's not enough.
The ceiling collapsed and still won by lying down? That's a bit mysterious, brother.
This set of logic looks good, but in practice, it's hard to say. I've seen many people fail at the "third startup" stage.
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This theory isn't without reason, but it's just too difficult to implement.
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All correct, but I tend to be the type who has an epiphany reading articles, then goes into a daze when actually trading.
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I've tried the volume shrinking to the bottom strategy, but I still caught a flying knife, and my fingers still hurt.
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The heartbeat line is interesting; it needs to be paired with a heart rate monitor.
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Every time I ask myself if I'm calm, and then my hands start trembling.
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Is this Hangzhou trading strategy truly effective, or is it survivor bias?
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I agree; most people probably won't even wait for the third restart.
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After reading, I want to go all in again—that's the scythe, right?
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Trading volume is indeed a mirror to the true nature; my problem is I can't tell who the monsters are.
Got cut again this wave, waiting for the rebound
Talking so definitively, why are there still people losing
Is trading volume really that accurate? I just don't understand it
Every time they say control your emotions, but when the market drops, you can't hold it
Relying on gut feeling to cut losses, isn't that just gambling with luck?
The third time is the real chance to pick up the phone... but that might be in the Year of the Monkey or the Horse