#MarketPullback

A crypto market pullback usually means a temporary decline in prices after a recent upward move. It’s different from a full reversal (bearish trend) — pullbacks are often short-term corrections within a larger bullish structure.

🔎 Here’s what typically happens during a pullback:

Reason: Traders take profits after a rally, or there’s temporary fear from news, data, or global markets.

Range: Pullbacks usually retrace 10–30% of the recent move in crypto, but in highly volatile coins, it can be deeper.

Opportunities: Many investors use pullbacks to accumulate coins at cheaper levels, especially if the overall trend is still bullish.

Risk: If the pullback breaks key support levels, it can turn into a trend reversal.

📊 Key things to watch in a pullback:

Bitcoin dominance → If BTC holds better than altcoins, alts may bleed harder.

Support levels → Look at moving averages (50 EMA, 200 EMA) or Fibonacci retracement zones.

Volume → A low-volume drop usually signals a healthy pullback, while high-volume selling can show panic.