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#数字资产市场动态 Meet a 46-year-old friend from Shanghai who has been navigating the crypto market with me for a full 8 years.
With a principal of 20,000 yuan, he used the simplest methods—sharpening his sword over ten years—and now has over 38 million yuan sitting in his account. This guy lives a plain life, owns four properties—one for himself, one for his parents, and two rented out for steady income. It looks like an ordinary case of financial freedom, but he never relies on insider information, and luck isn’t exactly his strong suit.
The real secrets are actually just six points—so simple it’s almost ridiculous, but he’s stuck to them for ten years.
**1. Rapid Rise with Gentle Pullback = Main Players Accumulating**
Prices surge fiercely but pull back slowly; this is usually large funds quietly building positions. Don’t be fooled by surface volatility; the key is to watch the rhythm.
**2. Weak Rebound After a Flash Crash = Funds Are Exiting**
If the price drops sharply and can’t recover, it basically indicates the main players are pulling out. At this point, the urge to buy the dip should be reined in—being caught in a trap is most likely.
**3. High Volume at a Top Doesn’t Always Mean a Peak**
Volume at the top area can sometimes be a final sprint. The truly dangerous signal is often shrinking volume at the top—that’s a sign the trend is winding down.
**4. Single Large Volume Is Fake; Continuous Volume Is Real**
One-time huge volume is often an illusion, a trick to deceive retail investors. Multiple consecutive volume surges indicate genuine market consensus forming.
**5. Trading Is About Sentiment, Not K-Line Patterns**
All technical indicators ultimately reflect emotions. And volume? That’s the most raw expression of market sentiment.
**6. "Nothingness" Is the Highest Practice**
No desire, no fear, no attachment. Only those who can endure the loneliness of an empty position are qualified to seize the truly big trends.
The movement of coins like $SLP can also be analyzed using this logic. The seemingly complex market is actually just this simple.
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The concept of volume is simple to say, but in practice, it’s just stop-loss, stop-loss, and more stop-loss. The mindset first collapses.
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Desireless, fearless, and non-attachment—sounds nice, but I think most people are just numb from being trapped and pretend to be calm.
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This theory sounds straightforward and easy to understand, but those who truly make money never break down their secrets and share them online.
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The logic of a sharp rise followed by a gentle correction ignores the market’s tendency to repeatedly hit you, haha.
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Is continuous volume increase really the case? Fine, I’ll treat this as mysticism, and it’s not too far off.
Really, most people fail because of "endurance." They can't even hold a position during sideways trading, let alone talk about a big market move.
I often rely on the volume approach, especially the continuous volume increase pattern, which is more reliable than any indicator and has never failed me.
However, starting with a 20,000 principal—if you're entering now, you'd better not compare yourself to the past. The times are completely different.
Holding a dry position is indeed difficult, but looking back, minimizing losses is a win.
I've reviewed this logic multiple times, and the fifth point hits me the most — human nature is everything.
To put it simply, you still need to have resolve; most people simply can't hold on for ten years of this heat.
$SLP has had a crash before, and if you look at the trend with this logic... it was indeed a pattern of shrinking volume and bottoming out.
Volume doesn't lie; the phrase "continuous volume increase" is spot on.
But there is some truth in those six points, especially the fifth—"The market is driven by human psychology," which is very true. But the problem is that most people understand this principle, yet still have explosive emotions. Who the hell can endure the feeling of being out of the market? I definitely can't.
As for the sixth point, the "nothing"... sounds like cultivation, but in reality? Still too difficult.