Many people get confused while trading cryptocurrencies: what positions can you enter, and where should you exit? Why do you get trapped as soon as you chase in, and when you cut your losses, it immediately rises? The problem isn't with the cryptocurrency itself; it's that you haven't grasped the concept of "key levels." Honestly, key levels are not some magical points; they are traces left by the capital game in the market. Once you understand this, you'll find the market isn't that mysterious at all. Today, I'll break down the methods I commonly use so that even beginners can understand.

1. First, find the "historical trading dense areas" - the market has memory. Open the candlestick chart and see which ranges had particularly high trading volumes in the past, oscillating back and forth several times; these are the key levels. Because a large number of shares were traded here, when the market returns, it will either be support or resistance. Take Bitcoin as an example: previously, it rose from 48,000 to 53,000, and in between, the range of 49,000 to 50,000 had significant trading volume daily; this is a dense trading area. Later, when the market retraced, it held up here, which is support; if the next time it rises to this level and cannot break through, it becomes a resistance level.

2. Focus on the "repeated verification of highs and lows" - don’t underestimate the tactics of the market makers. In a round of market activity, once a previous high is broken, it will likely become support upon retracement; if a previous low is broken, the next time it rebounds to this level, it is likely to become resistance. Many beginners always think, "this time is different; the market will take a new route," but they end up being manipulated by the market makers. Market makers like to use these visible highs and lows to shake out traders and deceive them, so if you're not careful, you can easily fall into traps.

3. Volume is the "touchstone of key levels" - without trading volume, it's all nonsense to only look at price levels; it must be combined with volume. If the price rises to a certain level, suddenly there is a spike in volume but it just can't break through, then this level is definitely strong resistance, so withdraw quickly; if the volume breaks through this level, then it becomes support. Remember, the combination of volume and price is the real key. Breakthroughs without trading volume are all "false breakthroughs," so don't blindly rush in. Another common pitfall for beginners: constantly staring at small timeframes like 1 minute and 5 minutes, which can leave you confused. In fact, the truly useful key levels are found on larger timeframes like 4 hours, daily, or even weekly charts. Small timeframes are all noise; the larger timeframes show the true direction. Ultimately, key levels are the market's "equilibrium points." Whether you can understand this directly determines whether you are a victim being harvested or someone who can profit from the market. Stop thinking about catching tops and bottoms all day; first learn to identify key levels, then wait for market confirmation signals. The market is never short of opportunities; what it lacks is patience and a disciplined mindset. People often ask me: "Bro, how do you find key levels?" The answer is actually very simple: look at historical trading to find ranges, validate with changes in volume, and then determine direction with larger trends. Understand these three points, and you can save a lot of unnecessary losses. The market is still brewing; if you still don't know the ropes or how to operate, that's okay. Quickly align with me to lay out strategies; let's seize the opportunities in this bull market together and make a good profit!$BTC #Strategy增持比特币