🚨Bitcoin's Make-or-Break Moment: Trading the Double Bottom Without Losing Your Nerve🚨

Right now, Bitcoin is setting up what could be the most important chart pattern of the month. On the 4-hour chart, we're seeing a classic double bottom forming - two solid bounces off $74,500 with the neckline waiting at $80,000. This is the kind of setup that gets traders excited, but before you jump in, let's talk about how to play this smart in these volatile conditions.

The double bottom tells us buyers are stepping in hard at $74,500 - not once, but twice. That's significant. If we can push through $80,000, history suggests we could quickly run to $85,500. But here's the catch - we're trading in the shadow of Trump's potential tax bombshells, and that could blow up this technical setup at any moment.

Here's how I'm approaching this:

First, I'm not betting everything on the breakout. Instead, I'm setting up a strategic accumulation plan. I'll start with a small position here around $76,000, then add more if we retest $74,500. If things really go south and we hit $72,000 (where there's a CME gap waiting to be filled), that's where I'll deploy my final tranche.

The key is to not get shaken out by the noise. Remember, Bitcoin ETFs have been buying 12,000 BTC weekly even during these dips. The big money isn't panicking - they're accumulating.

If we do break $80,000, I'll watch for a pullback to $78,500 to add my final position before riding the wave up to my first target at $85,500. From there, I'll take some profits but keep a good chunk for a potential run to $100,000 as we get deeper into halving season.

What makes this work is the discipline to stick to the plan. No stop losses means no getting liquidated by whale games. The volatility is your friend here - each dip is a chance to improve your average entry.

Yes, Trump's tax news could wreck this setup. But if that happens, you'll be buying lower, which isn't the worst outcome. The institutions are clearly betting on Bitcoin's long-term story regardless of short-term politics.