Keep the orders going, let the brothers see the profits and losses, at least it's real, at least I won't talk big, at least I won't hedge, I'm just going all in with small bets! I take responsibility for every gain and loss!
Let's get the follow-trading going, over $10 please, test the market sense, don't let me be the one getting crushed, don't keep targeting me, you damn house!
The consequence of listening to live broadcasts every day is directly catching up with the top few of the smart money's 24-hour rankings. Tomorrow should be even higher. Keep it up, brothers!
There are always those who grasp the essence of learning, and there are always those who give you feedback. Of course, I'm also happy for you all.
The new waves of Qianjiang push forward the old ones; the blue is surpassed by the new blue. Keep it up, brothers, let's motivate each other!
Chapter 5 of Watching the Sword: Support and Resistance — The Lines Actually Drawn by Market Leaders
Many people learn to draw lines, but what truly determines whether prices stop or not is never the line, but the筹码 (trading volume).
Figure 1: Classic Support and Resistance Structure (Establish foundational understanding first)
Corresponding key points for explanation: Support: The level where funds are willing to step in Resistance: Area of concentrated筹码 (trading volume) Not 'drawing lines,' but drawing consensus The line is not drawn by you, but formed by the market.
Figure 2: Role Reversal of Support and Resistance (Must-Know Key Point)
Corresponding key points for explanation: Resistance after breakout → New support Support after breakdown → New resistance Retest confirmation is the best entry opportunity Why 'breakout is not a buying point, retest is'
Chapter 4: Volume – The 'Coroner' of All Chart Patterns
Figure 1: Volume surge vs. volume contraction on upward move (comparison of genuine vs. fake market moves)
Text point: Volume surge on upward move: real funds entering the market Volume contraction on upward move: sentiment driven, can fade at any moment 👉 Used to clarify: "Not every rise is worth chasing.
Figure 2: Volume surge at the bottom (institutional players starting to act)
Text point: Price consolidates Volume significantly increases Shares begin to exchange hands 👉 Used to correspond with: Necessary condition before a W-bottom or U-bottom is confirmed. Figure 3: Classic volume characteristics of a fake breakout (high price with no volume)
Text point: Breakout of key level Volume fails to keep up Falls back into the range quickly
Chapter Three: Trends and Moving Averages — Understanding the Fundamental Logic Behind 'Whether to Trade'
If chart patterns are entry signals, then trends and moving averages address only one thing:
Whether this move is worth your action. Many people learn chart patterns but still lose money; the problem often isn't the patterns themselves, but rather getting the direction wrong. First, remember this seemingly trivial but crucial statement: trade with the trend—it's the foundation of every trading system. You're looking for a U-bottom in a downtrend, Chasing breakouts in a ranging market, trying to catch the bottom during a main rally— Losses aren't a matter of probability; they're an inevitable outcome. Second, what is a trend? (Don't overcomplicate it) There are only three types of trends:
This bear chain has been performing well recently. There's a large unlock on February 6th, and there will be a surge during this period. Without a pump, the large unlock won't push the price up, so there will be a 15-day vacuum period. The extent of the rise will all happen during this window.
Don't overthink it—manage your position and just go for it. Set a stop-loss at 10%, and without a stop-loss, you can expect around a 50% gain—just depends on how bold you are.
Volume has increased, and the risk-reward ratio at this level is very favorable. Any coin that starts to gain volume will likely see a move afterward, though we can't tell if it will sustain. Just get on board, get caught in a drawdown, and analyze it from there.
Trust your decision, stick to your judgment—come on, brothers!
$黑马 I really bought😭😭😭I really bought, I really damn bought.
I bought so many underdogs and I really damn used profits to manage them, but I really managed 99, just damn one that I didn't manage, and it keeps me from sleeping.
😫I damn give up, the bull damn came, I damn sold too early, I damn... you damn...🤮
$Hei Ma I bought 100 dog coins, 99 of them had no vision, just this one didn't have vision, so you're giving me 10X Lafite, right?
The 99 with no vision all went to zero, but the one without vision instantly went 10X. I had a few accounts with less than 2000U scattered, and I went all-in on the Hei Ma, made 10% in one day, then I exited. Then you doubled that same day, and in just a couple of days, it became 10X?
If you say I didn't buy it or I didn't have vision, fine, but I just didn't have vision, and suddenly you gave me Lafite. I can't believe my luck, I'm so damn frustrated!!!
Gold is rising, silver is rising, crude oil is rising, the US stock market is rising, the A-share market is rising—seems like precious metals are all surging wildly, right?
Bitcoin has also risen significantly since Trump took office, and the overall crypto market has seen substantial gains, yet it doesn't seem like many in the crypto community are making huge profits, right?
So here's the question: where did the money go? Why is money flowing into these commodities like precious metals and crude oil? Is it due to consensus, or are global retail investors all uniformly bullish and buying up? It doesn't seem so! Then another question arises: why are they surging so wildly?
The reason behind the massive rise in precious metals and crude oil, as well as other resources, seems to be just one: preparing for the future. What kind of preparation? Is it about accumulating large amounts of these resources and precious metals as a hedge against uncertainty?
Another question: if Bitcoin is considered a safe-haven asset, why hasn't it surged yet? There are only two possibilities: either it lacks safe-haven attributes, or major institutional funds don't recognize it. Or perhaps it's saving up for a big move—stay tuned to the end of this article for the answer.
The crypto market currently lacks liquidity, while other financial products are wildly expanding. What exactly is about to happen—or is about to happen—or might happen in the future? What could possibly occur, or what is certain to happen?
Regardless of what is said or done, it's wise to hold some physical gold as a starting point, stock up on food at home, and raise two little chickens🐥—you can even feed the chickens with the grain.
If Honor of Kings launches Season 3, the Gold and Silver titles should also increase in value, and both sides' crystals and turrets would need oil for maintenance.
When the IP pump live stream was happening, brothers asked me if I could go long or short. Even if this coin goes up to 100, I won't get excited. I simply won't do it. The era of L1 blockchains is long over—no applications, no users, nothing at all. The only thing they have is strong manipulation capabilities, and experts with money. But I don't have to do it, right?
Resistance levels are at 4.5 / 5.2. If you want to short, wait for these two levels to enter your short positions. 4.5 is the MA120 and 5.2 is the MA180 moving average level, so pay close attention to these levels. You can try shorting at 4.5, and 5.2 is definitely a short opportunity.
Although I don't short, my success rate in shorting is higher than in going long. Shorting is like killing people—blood on the馒头 (steamed bun). But I truly don't like shorting. Don't force me to do it.
Avoid strong pump-and-dump coins. Focus on higher time frame indicators, because big players are waiting to short at higher time frame resistance levels. Indicators aren't something only I can understand—big players also use them. Indicators are just a consensus. The real issue isn't being afraid to go long, it's being afraid to go short. This coin isn't even listed on Binance spot, but Binance is still the place with the best liquidity for altcoins worldwide.
Pay close attention to these two levels: 4.5 / 5.2. When shorting, always watch resistance levels—not blind shorts. Blind longs or shorts? Anyone can do that. Use your brain, and keep learning!
Many people are shorting XMR, with prices moving from 500 to 680 in just two days, resulting in volatility exceeding 30%. I just want to ask: what's the point of shorting XMR? Why do people short it? Newbies might not understand, but even experienced traders make basic mistakes? With 3x leverage, you'd get liquidated.
Shorting at historical highs makes sense, as it's logical to bet it won't break past highs. I can understand going long or short at new highs, but what's the meaning of shorting after breaking a new all-time high? What's the point of holding through losses?
When ZEC broke Binance's all-time high of 372, you all rushed to short, only to see it surge past 700. How many people got trapped? Even after breaking new highs, there's resistance above, and old holders are still stuck—yet you still love chasing high short positions. Is there any real meaning in that?
Both XMR and ZEC have broken all-time highs. What's next? They're both privacy coins—XMR enforces anonymity, while ZEC offers optional anonymity. Their anonymity features are fundamentally different.
Another point: ZEC broke its all-time high with spot trading available, while XMR broke its high without spot liquidity. I simply don't understand the logic behind shorting at the peak. Even if you must short, why at 500 or 600? That seems excessive.
After breaking an all-time high, where is the selling pressure? Where are the trapped longs? There might be selling pressure if spot is available, but where is the pressure when there's no spot liquidity?
So think more carefully. When you see mountains, they're not just mountains; when you see water, it's not just water. What you see is likely exactly what others want you to see. Alright, that's enough.
Research and Analysis Guide: Understanding Sector Classification · First Episode: Privacy Sector
The privacy sector is the most suitable beginner example for understanding 'sector rotation,' without exception.
Many people always focus on the price movements of individual cryptocurrencies, but the real drivers of market trends are never just one single coin—they are entire sector logic systems at work. The anonymous coin sector is a clear, well-defined example with fixed members and strong interconnections.
When ZEC weakened, XMR stepped in and rose—this wasn't because one coin became stronger, but because capital continued seeking outlets within the anonymous narrative. Capital doesn't disappear; it just rotates within the same logic, thus pushing the anonymous sector forward.
Are there many anonymous coins? Actually, not many, and their positions are very fixed.
XMR and ZEC are unquestionable core large-cap coins. As soon as either of them starts rising, second-tier coins like DASH and ZEN will inevitably be picked up by capital, followed by small-cap coins such as XVG and BCN for catch-up gains. This isn't speculation—it's a capital path repeatedly validated by history.
The core principle of sector-driven markets can be summed up in one sentence:
The leaders and second-place players rise first; the rest will follow, it's just a matter of time.
Why do so many people consistently miss the mark?
It's not that they don't understand—it's that they always want to jump straight to the 'lowest-positioned underdog,' but when the leader hasn't been confirmed yet, the underdog won't move—often getting hit first. Then, when the leader finally breaks out, they hesitate because the price seems too high, and they're afraid to act.
This is the classic case of:
The mind understands, but the hand doesn't.
Besides traditional anonymous coins, pay attention to the broader 'privacy' concept. For example, ZKP, ZK, zero-knowledge proofs, privacy computing-related tokens—names vary widely—but whenever the privacy narrative activates, capital will forcibly pull them into the same logic pool, creating natural correlation.
Sector classification isn't complicated:
Same technology, same narrative—group them into one sector.
As for whether regulation or compliance might become an issue later—that's a future concern.
When the market moves, it only asks you one question:
Do you understand sectors? Are you willing to follow discipline?
The structure of privacy coins is right here in front of you. Opportunities are never mysterious—many just choose not to see them.