Whale movements have always been worth paying attention to. This morning, a large amount of funds entered a popular coin, and by evening, the market started to rally, with a straight-line candlestick directly triggering the short sellers' stop-loss levels. Another major player in a similar popular coin was also not idle, applying pressure on the short side at the 1709 pin line. This is a signal—there's only one outcome if you don't follow the trend. Since it broke through and stabilized, the probability of a short-term pullback is low.
Speaking of which, I usually don't like to chase the leading coin, but pay more attention to the second-tier ones. Why? Smaller market cap, relatively concentrated liquidity, and during a rally, their gains often outpace the leader by several streets. A classic comparison is the precious metals sector—after the metal leader starts up, silver and other second-tier metals tend to rise even faster and more vigorously.
Recently, that popular coin also started to rise. I set my stop-loss at the cost price, balancing losses and gains. Someone asked me if I’m worried about such a large position being wiped out by a single needle drop. Honestly, everyone fears it—if a gap down suddenly occurs, the profits made earlier are instantly gone, and it’s tough for anyone to feel comfortable.
But if you want to achieve a hundredfold return, you must dare to follow through and stand firm in key market conditions. You can't expect to catch wolves if you’re unwilling to let go of the kids. This logic also applies in trading. Risk and reward are always two sides of the same coin.
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RunWhenCut
· 10h ago
Long Er, this is indeed highly profitable. I'm also targeting it; it all depends on who is quicker.
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FUDwatcher
· 10h ago
Long Er is indeed violent, but it depends on timing; otherwise, you'll be the one getting cut.
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SilentObserver
· 10h ago
Long Er indeed has huge profits, but poor liquidity is also true; a single needle drop can directly wipe it out to zero.
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SolidityStruggler
· 10h ago
Long Er indeed has huge profits, but when liquidity is poor, it really feels like a knife—one needle prick and the blood keeps flowing.
Whale movements have always been worth paying attention to. This morning, a large amount of funds entered a popular coin, and by evening, the market started to rally, with a straight-line candlestick directly triggering the short sellers' stop-loss levels. Another major player in a similar popular coin was also not idle, applying pressure on the short side at the 1709 pin line. This is a signal—there's only one outcome if you don't follow the trend. Since it broke through and stabilized, the probability of a short-term pullback is low.
Speaking of which, I usually don't like to chase the leading coin, but pay more attention to the second-tier ones. Why? Smaller market cap, relatively concentrated liquidity, and during a rally, their gains often outpace the leader by several streets. A classic comparison is the precious metals sector—after the metal leader starts up, silver and other second-tier metals tend to rise even faster and more vigorously.
Recently, that popular coin also started to rise. I set my stop-loss at the cost price, balancing losses and gains. Someone asked me if I’m worried about such a large position being wiped out by a single needle drop. Honestly, everyone fears it—if a gap down suddenly occurs, the profits made earlier are instantly gone, and it’s tough for anyone to feel comfortable.
But if you want to achieve a hundredfold return, you must dare to follow through and stand firm in key market conditions. You can't expect to catch wolves if you’re unwilling to let go of the kids. This logic also applies in trading. Risk and reward are always two sides of the same coin.