As a KOL, or a technical analysis and teaching KOL, many people have high expectations of you.
They demand that you open positions with a 100% win rate, call for a rise, and it must go up the next second.
Call for a drop, and it must go down the next second.
If not, they will criticize you harshly and insult you openly.
Indeed,
In this market, it still relies on technical skills to make a living.
Why is it that those providing emotional value don’t thrive in Binance Square? Those skirting the edges can’t survive; they only sell themselves short, exposing their chest and thighs.
Without retail investors reporting, Binance will still ban you.
On X, those skirting the edges are called 'old perverts'; even without stirring the waters, they swim freely, unable to help it, as there are many old lechers on X. After all, X is still a mix of fish and dragons, requiring multiple roles.
Yesterday I called for a short on SOL, and wow, it was a tough call; some people stopped out, and some held firm.
I also tried my best to help everyone break even, saying during the live stream at night, 'Buy at 209, average down to 203 to break even.'
Indeed, this morning, it spiked, pulled back, and broke even. After that, no more cursing.
Recently, I haven't dared to short SOL; if it retraces, I plan to go long.
Many people will still complain.
They don't see that the day before, I told everyone to go long on all altcoins and BTC.
They don't see that last night, I called for a short on ETH at 4650.
In any case, you must be 100% correct; if you make a mistake once, stop-loss once, I will criticize you.
Ah, it’s really hard; I’m not a perpetual profit blogger.
As for BTC, the downtrend, shorting on rebounds, many people say it’s wrong. It has already broken below the lifeline, with a weekly divergence at the top. I declared the bull market over, and the bear market has begun. What's wrong? Is that not okay? $BTC $ETH $SOL