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$BTC 2 Weekend? During the weekend, the crypto market ā especially BTC ā tends to be less volatile because most of the large funds from institutions, investment funds, and market maker desks of banks are on break according to the traditional financial cycle. Crypto trades 24/7, but the largest liquidity still comes from organizations that operate according to normal working hours, so when they are on the sidelines, the market is left with retail traders.
BTC on weekends usually has low volume, a thin order book, leading to prices that do not fluctuate strongly due to a lack of real driving force. For example, if BTC is at 95,000 USD on Friday, by Saturday and Sunday the price usually only fluctuates within a small range of a few hundred USD because there is no large capital flow affecting it.
In fact, many derivatives exchanges even reduce their market-making activities, making prices more susceptible to slight movements but not creating a clear trend. Also, due to the lack of liquidity, strong pumps or dumps on weekends are often less reliable, and by Monday when institutions come back, the market creates real volatility.
In summary: the weekend is less volatile not because the market is āresting,ā but because the ones who create significant volatility ā institutional capital ā are resting, while BTC cannot move on its own when lacking large liquidity.
$PIEVERSE Why does the more short, the more it increases?
Many coins, especially newly listed coins, tend to increase in price when they are shorted because their liquidity structure is very thin and easily manipulated by Market Makers. When a coin is newly listed, there is virtually no price history, no clear resistance or support, so a relatively small amount of capital can push the price up to "sweep" all those who are short.
The crowd mentality thinks that after a coin is listed and pumped, it will dump, so they rush to short a lot, and they become the cheap liquidity that the Market Maker wants to collect. When the price is pushed up, the short positions get liquidated, and the system is forced to buy back to close the positions, creating a short squeeze effect that causes the price to rise even more.
In other words, the more people short, the more reason the market has to pump because there is more liquidity to hunt. Newly listed coins are even easier to pump due to the lack of price structure, lack of resistance areas, and high FOMO levels. Therefore, shorting newly listed coins is not a technical trade, but rather putting oneself in opposition to the Market Maker ā and most will lose right from the initial mindset.
When is it NOT advisable to trade? (Very important)
A professional trader differs from a novice not in the number of trades they take, but in the number of trades they reject. There are times when staying out yields more profit than any trade. Here are the 4 most important times you need to avoid:
1) When the market lacks a clear structure If the trend is ambiguous, prices are moving chaotically sideways, key levels are not holding, and setups are unclear⦠thatās when the market is ānoisy.ā The more you try to trade, the more you're drawn into a random market. Unclear = stay out.
2) When emotions are unstable After a loss, wanting to recover, after a big win feeling excited, feeling discouraged, or stressed due to external pressure ā all of these make you trade by reflex, not by logic. Trading in a bad state is like driving while distracted: you donāt know when youāre making mistakes.
3) When you haven't prepared a plan If you open a chart without knowing what you're looking for, what your SL ā TP levels are, or how your R/R looks⦠then donāt enter a trade. Amateur traders trade to ācatch opportunities,ā while professional traders trade according to a āprepared plan.ā No plan = no entry.
4) When you just missed a good opportunity Missing out on a good trade often creates a FOMO mentality of āgetting back in to compensate,ā but if a good setup has passed, the market is no longer suitable for entry. Most losing trades come from the effort to chase what has already been lost.
is the price of 1,300 considered a peak? This is the question many people are askingšš
The concept of āpeakā is not about the absolute price, but about the market context and the position of the buyer. Many people think high price = peak, low price = bottom. But the market does not operate that simply.
The most important thing is: Where is BNB in the cycle? Is the current upward momentum driven by speculation or real money?
If the price rises sharply due to FOMO, with no accumulation foundation and distribution volume starting to appear, then buying at any level in that zone is highly risky ā and yes, it can be called a peak.
Fear & Greed drops to 16 ā when many people are most afraid is often when the biggest opportunities arise. Do you think there are more opportunities or risks???š š š
When the Fear & Greed index falls deep into the "Extreme Fear" zone, the interesting thing is not how much the market drops, but how the crowd reacts. At 16, most retail traders fall into a defensive state: panic selling, staying out, or just looking at charts with a negative mindset. This is the natural behavior of the crowd ā they react based on emotions rather than data.
But if you shift your perspective to that of the sharks, you will see a contrasting picture. Sharks do not look for the āperfectā market timing; they look for moments when crowd psychology is pushed to the extremes. When people are scared to the point of not wanting to buy, liquidity is cheap, selling pressure is high, and the actual risk level is... much lower than when everyone is greedy.
Why do many people trade crypto but don't use technical analysis? Sounds a bit strange, right guys? ššš
The reason isn't that technical analysis is difficult, but rather how the crypto market operates and how traders react to it. First, crypto is highly volatile, causing many to believe that 'technical analysis can't keep up' and they act on emotions: FOMO when it pumps, panic when it dumps. When prices move too quickly, those lacking discipline will default to ignoring analysis.
Second, most traders enter the market with a mindset of making quick money, rather than an investment mindset. When the goal is 'quick trades ā quick wins,' then analyzing, planning, or waiting for entry points becomes something they... don't have the patience to do.
Third, crypto has a very strong media influence. Rumors, tweets, and advice from KOLs seem much more appealing than charts and numbers. People always want to hear what 'seems right,' rather than returning to objective data. Therefore, they choose emotions from the community instead of rules from charts.
What will happen if $ETH spikes at this moment? There is a truth in the past few days when the market is flooded with bad news, but the sharks are still gathering every day. If the market recovers at this moment, many small fish will jump out of the boat
What if the price of $BTC rises from here and breaks the ATH? What do you think, guys? I'm opening a small frame for you to see to feel a bit excited ššš
Why do 90% of traders fail? The problem lies not in knowledge but in psychology. The market always moves based on crowd behavior, and most get caught up in emotions. When the price moves strongly, they FOMO because they fear "missing out"; when the market corrects, they panic and cut losses at the wrong time. Emotions drive decisions faster than reason.
Losses do not come from a lack of analytical skills but from not adhering to analysis. Traders may understand patterns and trends, but when it comes to real trades, they react like gamblers. The market does not need intelligence, just discipline. Those who fail guess the market; those who win manage risk and accept probabilities. 90% fail because they seek "accuracy," while the remaining 10% focus on "consistency." Trading is essentially a psychological battle ā and the winner is not the one who sees the market correctly more often, but the one who can hold themselves together longer.
Is this the short-term bottom of $BTC or will it continue to grow long-term? At times like this, people often talk about the future story of why I didn't buy more bitcoin when the price of bitcoin dropped. How are you all reacting to this wave of selling?
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