Recently, I've been focusing on Alpine, and the more I look, the more I feel there's potential — but not for bulls, rather for shorting opportunities
Why?
First, the market sentiment: the rebound is getting weaker, high-level trading volume hasn't kept up, and the pullback is actually accompanied by increased volume, a typical sign of bullish weakness
Many people only see prices rising but don't notice that trading volume is secretly selling off, and that's the signal the market gives you — be careful, the bulls can't hold on
The technical indicators also give me hints: MACD divergence, consecutive long upper shadows, the candlesticks seem to tell you — the bullish momentum is being exhausted
The short-term trend hasn't stabilized, and market sentiment is starting to lean bearish
In practice, I usually do this:
First, I take a small position to test the waters, controlling it within 10% of the total position, without blindly going all in
Strict stop-loss, exiting immediately on high-level pullbacks; risk management is the top priority
Pay attention to key support levels; once they break, confirm the trend, and you can roll your position and follow up, turning unrealized gains into realized profits
Many people like to go all in when shorting; when the market rebounds slightly, they panic, and in the end, they not only don't make profits but also get washed out
My approach is to seek opportunities steadily — gradually taking the short profits the market gives you
Let me tell you, in this wave of Alpine, there's a hidden trick I've tested in my own real trades, and the profits are larger than you would imagine
But this trick is too sensitive; it can't be used carelessly — once mastered, you'll find shorting opportunities even more appealing than going long
Want to know how I operate this wave of Alpine and seize this hidden opportunity?
Contact me privately, and I'll walk you through the real trading process, helping you avoid pitfalls and make more money