What is the true essence of trading in the crypto world? Many people find it elusive, but the core can be summarized in one sentence: the game of time difference between Eastern and Western markets, and the cyclical patterns that result from it.
Let's start with some of the most striking phenomena. When prices are continuously falling during the day domestically, it often presents the best entry point. However, around 21:30 in the evening, overseas funds tend to initiate a rally. Conversely, if prices surge significantly during the day, don’t rush to follow the trend, as it’s likely just a setup for a correction in the evening. This pattern may seem simple, but executing it requires strong discipline.
Setting stop-loss and take-profit levels is also an art. When your short position’s stop-loss is just hit, the price usually moves in the expected direction—this is no coincidence. Coins like TRB teach us profound lessons in this regard. Similarly, when a short squeeze is imminent and just a little more is needed, rebounds often come to an abrupt halt. All these point to a harsh reality: the probability that the market is being systematically manipulated exceeds 80%.
Community recommendations and group sentiment traps are also very common. The more heated the discussion and the more exaggerated the promises in the group, the higher the chance that participants are caught in a trap. Conversely, when you’re uninterested or even skeptical about a project, that token often experiences explosive growth. Also, hot coins that the entire market is chasing are often the best opportunities for shorting.
Why is it so easy to get liquidated when holding large positions? Because you’ve already entered the exchange’s key monitoring list. When excitement peaks, a sharp plunge arrives as expected—this emotional manipulation is not conspiracy theory but a routine market tactic. FOMO drives new entrants to take the last buy-in, which is exactly what the market makers need for the next move.
How to survive? The answer is simple but difficult to implement: strictly control your position size, cultivate the ability to respond after the fact, and decisively stay put until you clearly understand the market maker’s intentions. Once you participate, you shift from being an observer to becoming the prey.
Ultimately, trading is a contest of patience, discipline, and timing—missing any one of these makes success impossible.
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FloorPriceNightmare
· 11h ago
Stop-loss gets hit and then reverses immediately, I've seen this too many times... It feels like the exchange is watching our positions.
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GateUser-40edb63b
· 11h ago
Damn, that hit too close to home. I'm the kind of unlucky person who always drops right after stopping losses. That TRB surge completely broke my defense.
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NFT_Therapy_Group
· 11h ago
Another post saying "I have achieved enlightenment," sounding so convincing... How many can truly survive?
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The 21:30 surge meme has been around for three years. Is it still accurate this year?
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Damn, that's why my TRB stop-loss was hit and it immediately dropped five points. Truly incredible.
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The more aggressively the group brags, the more I run. Now it's become a contrarian indicator haha.
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What they say is correct, but who doesn't get caught as a rookie when executing? The key is to stay alive.
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Heavy positions really are asking the exchange "When will you harvest me," proven countless times.
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Relying on patience? Forget it. Most people are just gambling on luck...
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I agree with this logic, but finding that 80% of manipulated reverse opportunities is even harder.
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No wonder I always spike in the opposite direction right after closing a position; turns out I’m on the monitoring list.
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FlyingLeek
· 11h ago
That hits too close to home. I'm the idiot who got wiped out by that surge at 9:30 PM.
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MetaverseHomeless
· 11h ago
During the day it drops, at night it rises. I've seen through this routine long ago, it's just that I don't have the money to buy the dip.
Really, once you sell, you can never get back up. That's the crypto world.
The more aggressively a coin is hyped in the group, the more I dare not touch it. Blood lessons learned.
Controlling position size sounds simple, but when it comes to actually acting, who the hell can control themselves?
Deciding not to move is actually harder than buying in the right direction. That's where I lost.
80% is manipulated, so the remaining 20% is also hard to catch.
Stop-loss and take-profit, I was very clear when setting them, but during execution, it's all emotions.
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GasFeeSobber
· 11h ago
Really, I've fallen into countless pits at 9:30 PM, it hits too close to home.
View OriginalReply0
NFTDreamer
· 11h ago
Wake up, this is the truth of the crypto world. You should have seen through it long ago.
What is the true essence of trading in the crypto world? Many people find it elusive, but the core can be summarized in one sentence: the game of time difference between Eastern and Western markets, and the cyclical patterns that result from it.
Let's start with some of the most striking phenomena. When prices are continuously falling during the day domestically, it often presents the best entry point. However, around 21:30 in the evening, overseas funds tend to initiate a rally. Conversely, if prices surge significantly during the day, don’t rush to follow the trend, as it’s likely just a setup for a correction in the evening. This pattern may seem simple, but executing it requires strong discipline.
Setting stop-loss and take-profit levels is also an art. When your short position’s stop-loss is just hit, the price usually moves in the expected direction—this is no coincidence. Coins like TRB teach us profound lessons in this regard. Similarly, when a short squeeze is imminent and just a little more is needed, rebounds often come to an abrupt halt. All these point to a harsh reality: the probability that the market is being systematically manipulated exceeds 80%.
Community recommendations and group sentiment traps are also very common. The more heated the discussion and the more exaggerated the promises in the group, the higher the chance that participants are caught in a trap. Conversely, when you’re uninterested or even skeptical about a project, that token often experiences explosive growth. Also, hot coins that the entire market is chasing are often the best opportunities for shorting.
Why is it so easy to get liquidated when holding large positions? Because you’ve already entered the exchange’s key monitoring list. When excitement peaks, a sharp plunge arrives as expected—this emotional manipulation is not conspiracy theory but a routine market tactic. FOMO drives new entrants to take the last buy-in, which is exactly what the market makers need for the next move.
How to survive? The answer is simple but difficult to implement: strictly control your position size, cultivate the ability to respond after the fact, and decisively stay put until you clearly understand the market maker’s intentions. Once you participate, you shift from being an observer to becoming the prey.
Ultimately, trading is a contest of patience, discipline, and timing—missing any one of these makes success impossible.