Zero, algotrader.
I develop trading bots for crypto exchanges. In this blog, I’ll share my experience: screeners, bots, algorithms
👉@Pro_Crypto_Resources
A pump is a bad place for a full-size short. Price moves fast, candles go vertical, volume expands, and late buyers start chasing after the clean part of the impulse is already gone. That is where manual shorts get squeezed.
ST-Bot uses staged execution: small first entry, predefined averaging levels, stricter filters on every next order, and take profit on the pullback.
Small First Entry
The first short is a probe.
It opens exposure without spending the whole risk budget before the market shows exhaustion.
A pump can extend higher than expected. Large first entry turns every next candle into stress. Small first entry keeps room for planned averages.
Averaging Rules
Averaging is not random adding.
ST-Bot does not increase the position just because price moved against the entry. Every next order needs a stronger signal than the previous one.
The structure:
• first entry for early exposure • next averages only after stronger confirmation • position size inside the risk model • take profit on the return from the overheated zone No revenge shorting. No guessing. No extra order because the candle “looks tired”.
VWAP Filter
VWAP acts as the fair-price layer.
During a pump, price can stay above VWAP while aggressive buyers control the tape. Early shorts there often become exit liquidity.
ST-Bot tracks several VWAP layers:
• Anchored VWAP • rolling 1H VWAP • rolling 4H VWAP • rolling 1D VWAP • daily VWAP slope
The deeper the average, the stricter the VWAP confirmation. Later orders need exhaustion across several layers, not one weak candle.
ZEREBRO Example $ZEREBRO showed the mechanics clearly.
Price pumped hard, volume expanded, and the move stretched far above the local VWAP zone. An early full-size manual short would have been under heavy pressure.
ST-Bot used staged exposure.
After the third hard average, the setup aligned: impulse exhaustion, high volume, pressure around session VWAP, and no clean continuation from the top area.
The position moved into take profit on the pullback. 📉
Execution
Averaging becomes dangerous when it is based on hope. It becomes tradable when every extra order has a rule, a filter, and a risk limit. ST-Bot does not fight every pump. It waits for a stretched move, enters with controlled size, adds only when confirmation improves, and closes when the pullback pays for the structure.
Can You Become an Algo Trader From Scratch Without Coding?
Yes. But not in the “find a magic bot, switch it on, and forget about it” sense. You do not need to write algorithms yourself. You need to run them properly. An algo trader is not necessarily a programmer. An algo trader is the person who: chooses which algorithms to runsets risk limitsdecides what to enable, what to disable, and where to allocate capital The code, signals, webhooks, and execution can already be handled by exchanges, platforms, and ready-made services. There are usually three roles in algo trading: Developer — writes the code and builds the strategyOperator — runs bots, adjusts risk, monitors reportsInvestor — provides capital and decides where it goes If you are starting from zero, you can enter as an operator or investor. You do not need to build your own engine in Python. There are several layers of automation. 1. Exchange bots and boxed solutions Many exchanges already offer basic automation: DCA bots, grid bots, simple trend systems, trailing logic, and partial exits. 2. TradingView + alerts + webhooks You set up indicators or strategies, create alerts, and let those alerts trigger execution on the exchange through a bot. That is already a real algo stack, even if you have never written a line of code. 3. Automating external signals Some traders automate signals that used to be executed manually. A Telegram signal appears, and the system opens the same small position every time. Technically, that is still algo trading. You are following a rule set, not your mood. But “no coding” does not mean “no understanding.” You still need a minimum base: risk managementbasic strategy typesAPI key safetyperformance stats and drawdown logic Without that, any bot turns into a slightly more complicated Telegram signal: while conditions are favorable, everything looks easy; once drawdown starts, panic takes over. A workable path into algo trading looks like this: start with ready-made strategies and demolearn simple automationtest with small sizebuild a portfolio of algorithms instead of relying on one setup This is where ready-made platforms become useful. On crypto resource, you do not need to code. You choose strategies, define risk, connect through API without withdrawal rights, and manage the process as an operator.
So yes, you can enter algo trading from zero, and you can do it without programming. Not because the work disappears. Because the work shifts from writing code to selecting systems, controlling risk, and managing execution. #Sign
Tom Lee from Fundstrat said on CNBC that ETH looks mispriced in the current market. The point is simple: Ethereum’s base case is much stronger than the price reaction shows.
$ETH fundamentals are not dead 🧱
A large part of tokenization still runs through Ethereum. Stablecoins, DeFi, institutional products, settlement layers, infrastructure — the activity is still there.
For months, the market treated ETH like a laggard. Bitcoin took the spotlight, while Ethereum kept building a gap between sentiment and fundamentals. These gaps can stay open for a while, then close fast.
Where retail gets trapped ⚠️
Most traders wait for the big green candle before they start believing again. Then comes the usual flow: market buy, leverage, late long, liquidation on the first pullback.
I’d rather watch the structure before the move becomes obvious:
— ETH/BTC relative strength; — open interest without crowded leverage; — funding that is not overheated; — liquidation clusters on pullbacks; — premium index and real spot demand.
Moon talk needs discipline 🌕
ETH can become one of the main stories of the next market phase. Buying the candle after everyone gets loud is weak execution.
Market regime first. Metrics second. Entry last.
Market Median, OI, funding, liquidations and premium index help filter the noise before pressing the button.
ETH looks interesting here. Chasing emotion is still the old way to pay for someone else’s exit. #Altseason #Bullrun $LDO $UNI
Some crypto assets could receive commodity-style treatment with disclosures instead of living under permanent SEC risk.
2) Projects get a legal launch path
Token sales and capital raising move closer to clear rules, reducing legal uncertainty for new crypto projects in the U.S.
3) Insider dumps get restricted
Teams, funds and related parties may face tighter limits on early token sales and market dumping.
4) DeFi gets split by control level
Base infrastructure, code, validators and nodes get more protection, while controlled frontends and managed protocols move closer to regulation.
5) Banks get a cleaner path into crypto
Custody, payments, trading, lending and tokenization become easier to fit into a legal institutional framework.
Follow me — I’ll tell you how I plan to make a shitload of money in this #supercycle and #Bullrun using bots and screeners. $IRYS $B $SAGA
Zero-sum Gamer
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Bullish
CLARITY Act Is Public. Altseason Ahead? 🚀
The U.S. is moving toward a clearer market structure for crypto: tokens, exchanges, DeFi, stablecoins, custody, banks and client asset protection. Legal fog around altcoins is being moved into law instead of another SEC enforcement cycle.
1. Tokens leave the gray zone
If an asset meets the conditions, it may receive commodity-style treatment with disclosures, without permanent SEC risk attached to the token itself. For altcoins, this is a strong point.
2. Projects get a legal launch path
Token sales and capital raising are being pushed into clearer rules. This reduces legal risk for new launches, funds and infrastructure players in the U.S.
3. Insider dumps get restricted
Teams, funds and related parties will not be able to receive early tokens, push narratives and dump into the market as freely as before.
4. DeFi is split by control level
Code, nodes, validators and base infrastructure get protection. Managed frontends and protocols with control levers move closer to regulation.
5. Stablecoin yield gets cut
Passive deposit-like yield on payment stablecoins becomes a conflict zone. Banks clearly do not want stablecoins taking over the deposit base.
6. Banks get a cleaner path into crypto 🏦
Payments, custody, trading, lending and tokenization move closer to a legal institutional framework.
Market read
For altcoins, this bill creates a bullish backdrop. Less legal noise in the U.S. makes it easier for capital to move into infrastructure, exchanges, RWA, DeFi and liquid tokens.
But trade the reaction, not the headline. Watch the vote, amendments, BTC, dominance, open interest, funding and liquidations.
Altseason needs liquidity first. CLARITY Act can build the backdrop. The market will show whether real demand is behind it. 📊 #Altseason #CLARITYAct #Bullrun $BTC $ETH $DOGE {future}(DOGEUSDT) {future}(ETHUSDT) {future}(BTCUSDT)
Today the market is watching U.S. #cpi . After that, attention shifts to Warsh, the Fed, and the next moves around the #CLARITYAct . For crypto, this is a strong setup: rates, dollar pressure, regulation, and capital flow expectations. For altcoins, it can create momentum, but buying green candles without filters is still a bad habit.
Where the risk is ⚠️
After the first strong move, the feed quickly flips into “altseason has started” mode. By that point, some coins are already stretched, open interest is rising, funding is heating up, and late longs start feeding the next pullback.
A better setup appears when the market digests the news, BTC keeps structure, and strong alts hold the pullback. If price goes vertical, OI expands too fast, and the crowd adds leverage, risk is already elevated.
What to watch 👀
Market regime, open interest, funding, liquidations, premium index, and correlation with BTC. Headlines can trigger the move, but metrics confirm the trade.
I check Market Median first, then screeners, then the specific asset. If the market holds and the alt does not break on the first pullback, there may be a trade. If the market is overheated, skipping the move is better than buying someone else’s euphoria at the highs.
Crypto forgives a lot, but it does not forgive greed with leverage. ⚠️
That is why risk management matters more than a beautiful entry. I trade with bots for this exact reason: while I handle my own business, the algorithm can enter a $6 position, take its 10 cents, and wait for the next setup.
And unlike me, the bot can close a thousand of these small trades in a day. No emotions, no greed, no need to squeeze more from the trade. 🤖📊 #RiskManagement #bot_trading $IRYS $PROMPT $OPG
📌 New trader, check market regime and correlation first
Before opening a trade, check two things: market regime and correlation with the leader.
Market regime tells you if the market is pushing with you or against you. If the Market Median is weak, breadth is poor, Median RSI has no impulse, and most coins are under pressure, a long already starts with bad conditions. A clean local chart will not save a trade when the whole market is heavy.
Correlation tells you who really moves your coin. If the asset has a strong Pearson correlation with BTC or ETH, it will often follow the leader. BTC makes one weak move down, and your “strong setup” quickly turns into a normal market drag.
The beginner mistake is looking only at the coin. Breakout is there. Volume is there. Candle looks good. But the market regime is weak, the leader is unstable, and correlation is high. That trade is already exposed before you even click Buy.
Simple filter: first market regime, then correlation, then entry.
If the market is bearish and the asset is tightly linked to BTC, a long needs a short target, fast risk control, and clear invalidation. Otherwise, skip it.
Crypto Resources has Market Median and a correlation table with the market leader for exactly this reason. First check the background. Then check who actually controls your coin. $PROMPT $AKE $ETH
The current slice shows the market holding above its baseline path, but breadth is now closer to neutral. Momentum is below 50, while both overheating and oversold pressure remain low. The regime is calm: structure is alive, but longs require selection and patience.
📈 Regression deviation: 2.49% — the market is above its baseline path, structure has not been taken over by pressure. 📍 % above SMA200: 52.12% — breadth is average: there are still strong coins, but broad participation is weaker. 🔥 Median RSI: 42.53 — momentum is below neutral, the market is cooling after prior moves. 🌪 Volatility: 0.60 — the backdrop is moderate, without aggressive risk expansion. ⚠️ % overbought: 3.17% — overheating is low, no broad market short signal here. 🩸 % oversold: 0.77% — no capitulation, the cleaner reversal-long zone has not formed yet.
Bottom line: the regime is moderately constructive, but momentum is weak. The cleaner plan is to wait for pullbacks, RSI stabilization, and coins holding structure better than the market.
📈 BlackRock Just Put Crypto Back in the Institutional Conversation
Larry Fink is talking about the expansion of global capital markets. For crypto, that is a serious backdrop: tokenization, ETFs, stablecoins, digital settlement and new market rails. Big capital does not move on memes. It moves when infrastructure and regulation start lining up.
May 14 is the date to watch
The CLARITY Act can give the market another regulatory catalyst. Clearer rules make it easier for institutions to build, allocate and stay in the sector without treating crypto like a temporary trade.
Retail will probably chase the headline
Big name. CNBC clip. BlackRock. Green candles. That is usually enough for late longs to pile in after the move has already started. Then the first sharp pullback does the cleaning.
My read
$BTC BTC first. Then open interest, #Funding , #Liquidations and Market Median. If #OI grows without overheated funding, liquidations stay under control and Median remains constructive, strong alts can keep rotating.
If funding is stretched, candles are vertical and everyone is buying the headline, the risk profile gets worse fast. A bullish backdrop does not fix a bad entry.
The market signal
BlackRock is pointing at a larger shift: crypto is being pulled closer to global capital markets. The headline gives context. BTC, OI, funding, liquidations and market phase decide the trade.
Market Median is available for free in Crypto Resources. $ETH ⚙️📊 $SOL
Tim Scott just gave crypto a strong political signal 🟢
Tim Scott chairs the Senate Banking Committee. That puts his words close to the banking regulation layer.
Now the CLARITY Act is back on the calendar. Add his line about making America the crypto capital of the world, and the market gets a simple signal: crypto regulation is moving through the actual process. ⚖️
Why the market cares 📌
Crypto has been stuck for years with the same problem: unclear rules. Where does a commodity end? Where does a security begin? Who regulates what?
If CLARITY moves forward, capital gets a cleaner framework. Exchanges, stablecoins, custody, public crypto companies and payment rails all benefit from less regulatory fog. 🏦
Signal stack 🐂
— the Senate Banking Committee chair is openly pro-crypto; — CLARITY is back in the Senate workflow; — banks are already fighting around stablecoin rules; — the market can price regulatory clarity before the final vote.
When banks start defending territory, crypto is no longer a side market. 🔥
How I trade this 📊
Chasing every green candle after a political headline is weak execution.
News gives the impulse. Structure decides the trade.
I watch BTC, open interest, funding, liquidations and premium index.
If price is rising, OI holds, funding stays controlled, and shorts are getting liquidated — the impulse has room. ✅
If funding overheats, OI gets bloated, and price stops moving — late longs become fuel. ⚠️
The market doesn’t owe you a reversal at your liquidation level. (с) Zero
⚙️ You can trade without stops. Position size decides everything
A stop loss is one way to control risk. A tiny entry is another. If you trade without stops, your position size has to be almost boring: 1–1.5% of the deposit per trade. No oversized entries. No emotional averaging. No “the market must reverse here.”
The screenshot shows an ST-Bot working with risk management. Small entries, controlled margin load, distributed positions, clear system logic. That is how a strategy survives noise instead of getting killed by one aggressive candle.
Where traders break
They remove the stop, then keep the same position size they used for stop-based trading. One impulse goes against them, and the whole setup turns into waiting for liquidation.
Working logic
Trading without stops only makes sense with:
— small entries; — margin limits; — coin filters; — open interest, funding and liquidation control; — enough discipline to hold the structure without panic.
The bot on the screenshot is doing well because it is not trying to guess every candle. It works through size, rules and execution.
The market doesn’t owe you a reversal at your liquidation level. Keep liquidation far away. Keep the entry small.
A trading bot is useful when the setup is already clear. Filters first. Execution second. Emotions last. ⚙️
System logic
The bot scans coins, checks volume, open interest, funding, and liquidations, waits for conditions, and opens a trade only when the setup matches the rulebook.
Crowd mistake
Most traders see one green candle and start chasing. Then they move stops, average without a plan, and call it intuition. The bot has no opinion. It either has permission to enter, or it does nothing. 📊
Workflow
Start in DEMO. Use small size. Add filters. Track results. Scale only after the system survives different market phases. 🧠
That is the whole point of Crypto Resources: screeners, Market Median, and bots in one process. Market phase first. Setup second. Execution after confirmation.
Rising open interest shows where fresh risk is entering the market: new positions, new leverage, new pressure.
I track these coins first because price can look calm while positioning is already changing under the surface.
🔎 How I read it
When OI rises with price, I look for continuation after a clean pullback.
When OI rises while price stays flat, I watch the compression. This is where the next impulse often starts loading.
When OI spikes on a thin coin, I slow down and check funding, liquidations, volume, premium index and basic structure.
⚙️ How I trade it
A coin at the top of the OI list only gets attention. The trade needs a level, a pullback, a reaction, and clear invalidation.
For longs, I prefer strength after a pullback.
For shorts, I need overheated OI, weak continuation, fading momentum and the first signs of structure breaking.
🧰 Crypto Resources workflow
Inside Crypto Resources I use the OI screener as an attention filter. Then I check funding, liquidations, premium index and the Market Median. The screener shows where the market is building pressure. The rest of the stack helps decide whether that pressure is continuation, trap, squeeze fuel or late leverage.
OI is where I start watching. The trade only comes after structure confirms. #Openinterest #scan $LDO $BANANA $SAGA
The current slice shows the market holding above its baseline path, with breadth still solid, but momentum has dropped below neutral. Overheating has mostly cleared, so this is more a selection and stabilization zone than a place to chase green candles.
📈 Regression deviation: 3.50% — the market is above its baseline path, structure is not broken. 📍 % above SMA200: 69.87% — breadth is strong, most coins are still holding above the long-term average. 🔥 Median RSI: 44.66 — momentum is below neutral, cooling after the previous strong move. 🌪 Volatility: 0.70 — movement is calmer, without aggressive risk expansion. ⚠️ % overbought: 1.56% — no broad overheating on the current read. 🩸 % oversold: 0.78% — no capitulation either, the market is not broadly washed out.
Bottom line: structure remains constructive, but momentum is weaker. Longs look cleaner after pullbacks, RSI stabilization, and confirmation from strong coins holding structure. Broad market shorts are not the priority here. #MarketSentimentToday #analysis #median $US $OPG $JELLYJELLY
Now shorts are paying to hold a position that is not working. If price pushes through the local high, their exits become buy pressure. That is how a normal grind turns into a vertical candle.
🧰 How I use this
I don’t scan hundreds of coins by hand. My screeners catch OI spikes, premium index shocks, funding extremes and unusual volume. Then I check CVD, spot support and structure. For me the entry zone is before the vertical candle: futures selling, spot absorbing, OI growing, funding negative, price holding. After the pump, the job changes. Then I’m checking if OI holds, if the impulse zone survives, and whether the fuel has already burned.
Follow me and I’ll show where to get these tools for your own trading for free. Drop a plus in the comments under this post. #pump #long $BTC $ETH
I don’t wait until a coin is already flying and everybody starts posting screenshots. I watch where the move is being built: volume, open interest, premium index, funding, and price reaction.
📊 Example: $LAYERUSDT Volume entered the coin. Open interest went almost vertical. Premium index dropped hard from around zero to -0.1. Funding is around -2% on the current reading, with a 4-hour funding interval. That kind of stack is rarely random. New positions are entering, futures start trading at a heavy discount, shorts are paying to hold, and price is already showing impulse.
⚡ First Setup: Long From OI Expansion When open interest rises together with price, fresh risk is entering the market. The asset is no longer just printing a green candle. Positions are being built, and the market is trying to push the coin higher. I don’t buy growth blindly. I check if price holds, if volume supports the move, and if OI does not collapse after the first spike. If OI stays elevated, the move still has fuel.
🔥 Second Setup: Golden Funding When premium index drops deep into negative territory and funding gets heavily negative, the market is usually overloaded with shorts. Traders think the coin is already too high, but their own position becomes fuel for the next move. If price keeps pressing higher, the squeeze starts. Shorts close, liquidations add pressure, and the pump accelerates through market mechanics.
🧰 What My Screeners Do
My screeners save me from manually scanning hundreds of coins. They send signals on open interest growth, sharp premium index changes, funding extremes, and other imbalances.
So I get a clean map of the setup: OI expansion first, premium index distortion next, funding pressure after that, then chart and volume. That’s how I look for the start of a pump before it becomes obvious in the feed. Follow me and I’ll show where to get these tools for your own trading for free.
At this reading, the market remains above its baseline path, but momentum has cooled down. Breadth is strong, with most coins above SMA200, while Median RSI is now below neutral. This looks more like cooling after a strong stretch than a fresh acceleration.
📈 Regression deviation: 4.07% — the market is above its baseline path, with structure still intact. 📍 % above SMA200: 79.43% — breadth is strong, with most coins above long-term support. 🔥 Median RSI: 46.84 — momentum is below neutral, buyers are taking a pause. 🌪 Volatility: 0.58 — price action is active, but not chaotic. ⚠️ % overbought: 2.86% — overheating has almost cooled down, far from a broad short zone. 🩸 % oversold: 1.43% — weakness is limited, with no broad market pressure.
Bottom line: the backdrop remains constructive by breadth and positive regression, but longs need Median RSI stabilization after the cooldown, not chasing. Broad shorts are not confirmed by Market Median: overbought share is low and far from the 50%+ mass overheating zone. The cleaner mode is to wait for pullbacks, focus on strong coins, and keep short-from-pump selective in isolated overheated assets after weakness is confirmed.
Buy the rumor, sell the PnL screenshots on Twitter 🟢
The CLARITY Act is scheduled for review by the Senate Banking Committee on May 14. This is not final approval yet. It is a markup stage: amendments, negotiations, noise, and expectation buildup.
For the market, this is classic narrative fuel: first comes the pump on expectations, then late buyers absorb someone else’s profit-taking.
Don’t trade the headline alone. Watch OI, funding, and liquidations. If the crowd is already celebrating the law, someone is already selling them the candle. 📉
🟢 Altseason Smells Like Euphoria, but Chasing Highs Is a Bad Trade
The market printed two strong green days and everyone suddenly remembered the word altseason. Alts bounced, timelines flipped bullish, and the mood changed fast.
Relief. Excitement. FOMO. That feeling that the hard part is over. This is where late buyers usually get trapped.
🟢 Green Candles Lie
The first strong candles after a long weak phase always look convincing. Retail sees movement, forgets risk, and starts buying coins that already moved.
The cleaner entry was lower, when the chart looked uncomfortable. Buying after the move gives you worse risk, worse invalidation, and less room to manage the trade.
Until Bitcoin holds above $87,000, the broad altcoin move stays fragile. One sharp BTC tick down can pull most alts back with it. Liquidity is thinner, late longs are crowded, and leverage sits too close.
🟡 BTC Still Leads
The weekly BTC candle is not clean yet. A doji near this area, with dominance still heavy, keeps the market in a fragile zone.
Alts can look strong while BTC pauses. Then one BTC flush reminds everyone where the main liquidity still sits.
🔴 My Plan
I’m not chasing green candles at the highs. I’m not buying weak coins after a vertical move. I’m waiting for pullbacks, structure hold, open interest, liquidations, funding, and the reaction of alts when BTC weakens.
At Crypto Resources, I check the Market Median first, then screen for coins. If the market is overheated, patience is part of the setup.
Altseason can be forming. Buying euphoria at the highs is how traders turn a good market into a bad entry.