#Strategy加仓BTC Want to achieve stable profits through trading? It's not that mysterious; the key is to understand the market's pulse.
Market trends have rhythm, but most people haven't noticed one issue: which time dimension do the truly frequent fluctuations belong to?
You can see on any chart—daily, 4-hour, 1-hour—there seem to be "decent" market movements everywhere.
But there's a trick. The higher the level, the fewer large trends appear. Conversely, the structure of larger cycles is cleaner and less disturbed.
Why? The answer is quite straightforward—real large-scale trends are always driven by big capital. And big capital won't go against the market fundamentals to mess around.
More precisely, it's the market expectations formed by fundamentals that provide support.
Expectations don't appear out of nowhere. They need time to brew, gradually ferment, and slowly form a clear trend. So each major shift is built bit by bit; sudden explosions are rare.
During this process, you need to do two things: first, follow the market sentiment reflected by technical analysis; second, wait for fundamental expectations to be widely recognized. Only when both conditions are met can the trend continue. Relying on just one usually results in short-term pulses.
Once you understand this, you'll realize: frequent chasing and selling in small timeframes is just being led by noise. The truly valuable opportunities are mostly hidden in larger timeframes.
Fooling around will never find real opportunities.
If you're also trading repeatedly and frequently getting shaken out, you might consider a different approach—using the framework of "observing cycles, structures, signals, and rhythm" to analyze trends. But in the end, this path still has to be walked by yourself.
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PanicSeller69
· 6m ago
That's a good point, but I still think most people can't stick to this system at all. They watch the daily chart calmly turn around and then go play with the 1-hour chart.
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BlockchainFoodie
· 13h ago
yo this is literally just fermentation theory applied to markets lmao... like u gotta let the yeast do its thing on the weekly, not obsess over every bubble in the daily. big money moves like aged wine, not instant ramen. most people scalping noise tbh
Reply0
mev_me_maybe
· 13h ago
After all this, the main point is not to get played out by the 1-hour chart. Just look at the cycle.
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New_Ser_Ngmi
· 14h ago
That's quite right, but most people simply can't hold on. They understand the cycles and all, but when it comes to a one-hour chart plunging, they still can't resist cutting their losses.
View OriginalReply0
NotGonnaMakeIt
· 14h ago
Basically, don't be fooled by the 1-hour chart. The long-term cycle is the real deal. Small retail investors constantly flipping charts are just asking for trouble.
#Strategy加仓BTC Want to achieve stable profits through trading? It's not that mysterious; the key is to understand the market's pulse.
Market trends have rhythm, but most people haven't noticed one issue: which time dimension do the truly frequent fluctuations belong to?
You can see on any chart—daily, 4-hour, 1-hour—there seem to be "decent" market movements everywhere.
But there's a trick. The higher the level, the fewer large trends appear. Conversely, the structure of larger cycles is cleaner and less disturbed.
Why? The answer is quite straightforward—real large-scale trends are always driven by big capital. And big capital won't go against the market fundamentals to mess around.
More precisely, it's the market expectations formed by fundamentals that provide support.
Expectations don't appear out of nowhere. They need time to brew, gradually ferment, and slowly form a clear trend. So each major shift is built bit by bit; sudden explosions are rare.
During this process, you need to do two things: first, follow the market sentiment reflected by technical analysis; second, wait for fundamental expectations to be widely recognized. Only when both conditions are met can the trend continue. Relying on just one usually results in short-term pulses.
Once you understand this, you'll realize: frequent chasing and selling in small timeframes is just being led by noise. The truly valuable opportunities are mostly hidden in larger timeframes.
Fooling around will never find real opportunities.
If you're also trading repeatedly and frequently getting shaken out, you might consider a different approach—using the framework of "observing cycles, structures, signals, and rhythm" to analyze trends. But in the end, this path still has to be walked by yourself.