When trading DASH, the price drops to 60, and my fingers almost reflexively want to click to buy. Many people ask why I dare to operate like this, and the answer is actually not that mysterious.
At that moment, the signals coming from the market data stack up—sector enthusiasm is still there, early support levels are solid, and market panic just happens to be released—it's like an instinct in your body telling you it's time to rebound. This is not some metaphysical phenomenon, but the result of a team doing a lot of dirty work behind the scenes.
Some monitor large on-chain fund flows to figure out what the big players are doing; some scan the entire network for sentiment to gauge market temperature; others analyze derivatives positions and leverage data to find the critical point between bulls and bears. All this information is finally aggregated here, turning into a very simple buy or sell decision.
Why do retail investors often lag behind? Because they are still watching the K-line. Professional traders are listening to the market's breathing, feeling its pulse, and sensing changes in its temperature—this half-step difference is the key to capturing bottom rebounds.
Look at those people—after buying, they get trapped; when they cut their losses, the price rises. The problem isn't with technical analysis itself, but with not developing the ability to perceive the market rhythm. Opportunities in the market are always there, but only those who can understand its temperament can truly seize them.
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TopBuyerBottomSeller
· 01-15 10:01
Teamwork is the true essence of making money; retail investors really find it hard to compete and win.
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FomoAnxiety
· 01-15 09:56
It sounds like an information gap; we retail investors simply can't keep up.
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MEVHunter_9000
· 01-15 09:52
Still the same old saying, information asymmetry is money asymmetry; retail investors will never be able to compete with those who have a team.
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FlashLoanLarry
· 01-15 09:40
That's correct, it's the gap between information asymmetry and execution capability.
When trading DASH, the price drops to 60, and my fingers almost reflexively want to click to buy. Many people ask why I dare to operate like this, and the answer is actually not that mysterious.
At that moment, the signals coming from the market data stack up—sector enthusiasm is still there, early support levels are solid, and market panic just happens to be released—it's like an instinct in your body telling you it's time to rebound. This is not some metaphysical phenomenon, but the result of a team doing a lot of dirty work behind the scenes.
Some monitor large on-chain fund flows to figure out what the big players are doing; some scan the entire network for sentiment to gauge market temperature; others analyze derivatives positions and leverage data to find the critical point between bulls and bears. All this information is finally aggregated here, turning into a very simple buy or sell decision.
Why do retail investors often lag behind? Because they are still watching the K-line. Professional traders are listening to the market's breathing, feeling its pulse, and sensing changes in its temperature—this half-step difference is the key to capturing bottom rebounds.
Look at those people—after buying, they get trapped; when they cut their losses, the price rises. The problem isn't with technical analysis itself, but with not developing the ability to perceive the market rhythm. Opportunities in the market are always there, but only those who can understand its temperament can truly seize them.