Let's first look at the technical aspect. The short-term KDJ and MACD bullish momentum are shrinking, which is a signal. On the main chart, the MA5 is still trending downward, and the MA30 is also oscillating and declining, with the price moving back and forth within a narrow range. In simple terms, it's forming a box pattern, with both the upper and lower bounds tightly pressed.
Next, looking at the 12-hour chart, the KDJ and MACD are weakening simultaneously, and trading volume continues to shrink. Volume is the most honest indicator—when trading volume decreases, it shows participation is declining. Usually, during the weekend, such market conditions don't have much volatility; the market is just passing time.
Therefore, the advice at this stage is: do nothing. Really, avoid frequent trading, and try to avoid unnecessary turnover. It's the weekend; take a break and let the market breathe. Watch the charts more and trade less—that's the right approach. Repeated trading is the easiest way to get caught in a trap during such oscillating markets.
The above is an early morning real-time observation, for reference only.
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ImaginaryWhale
· 5h ago
Weekends are for relaxing, yet you insist on messing around in this kind of market. Isn't that just inviting trouble?
Trading volume has dried up, and you still want to operate? Fine, I'll watch you lose money.
Wait, he said don't move, so don't move? I just want to try.
He's right, this kind of market is really just wasting transaction fees.
Just watching the market over the weekend is enough, but the itch to trade is a real old habit.
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FOMOrektGuy
· 01-10 17:55
Oh, the box oscillation is the most annoying, and the trading volume is also weak. The weekend is indeed a good time to rest.
Handshake, not trading hands frequently is really the hardest thing.
I truly understand the saying that volume doesn't lie; I was cut multiple times from frequent trading before.
That's how it is this weekend. Let's see what happens on Monday.
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potentially_notable
· 01-10 17:52
That's how weekends are—once the trading volume shrinks, there's not much point. Just play it safe and keep an eye on the market, don't get itchy hands.
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GasFeeCryer
· 01-10 17:50
That's how the weekend is—shivering inside the box, still need to hold back from bottom fishing.
When the volume shrinks, don't mess around; taking some losses is the only way to learn what it means to honestly watch the market.
Got itchy again this morning, but luckily I woke up in time. If I hadn't checked this analysis, I would have definitely lost again.
With the KDJ moving this way, it feels like we need to wait a bit longer. Anyway, there aren't many opportunities over the weekend.
The bulls are all weakening. I think this is the biggest test of patience. Everyone, hold on!
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LiquidityWitch
· 01-10 17:48
volume's drying up like a cursed ritual gone wrong... the market's literally just sleeping rn, ngl. those weak signals ain't brewing nothing yet fr fr
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LiquidationSurvivor
· 01-10 17:30
This weekend's market is really testing everyone's patience. Just relax, everyone.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 01-10 17:26
The market over the weekend was really boring. After watching for a while, it was just deep pullbacks and pushes. It's better to just stay flat and do nothing.
The market on January 11th is quite interesting.
Let's first look at the technical aspect. The short-term KDJ and MACD bullish momentum are shrinking, which is a signal. On the main chart, the MA5 is still trending downward, and the MA30 is also oscillating and declining, with the price moving back and forth within a narrow range. In simple terms, it's forming a box pattern, with both the upper and lower bounds tightly pressed.
Next, looking at the 12-hour chart, the KDJ and MACD are weakening simultaneously, and trading volume continues to shrink. Volume is the most honest indicator—when trading volume decreases, it shows participation is declining. Usually, during the weekend, such market conditions don't have much volatility; the market is just passing time.
Therefore, the advice at this stage is: do nothing. Really, avoid frequent trading, and try to avoid unnecessary turnover. It's the weekend; take a break and let the market breathe. Watch the charts more and trade less—that's the right approach. Repeated trading is the easiest way to get caught in a trap during such oscillating markets.
The above is an early morning real-time observation, for reference only.