Maintaining a wait-and-see attitude toward the current market. The 71,000 I judged a few days ago hasn't pulled back, and has even gone up. So the current market is quite unclear. Even if I make a profit, it's still unclear; if I incur a loss, it's also unclear. It's like making money based on luck. This is not what I want. What I want is a market where the analytical approach aligns with the market trends. Then you can make profits clearly. You know where your stop loss and take profit are? You won't be confused. The current market can easily throw you off. The rise is chaotic. I'm waiting and not expressing any opinions. If you're talking about that kind of technical judgment with a one-point fluctuation, I don't want to comment on that. It's too low. Tomorrow the U.S. stock market opens. There will still be some fluctuation direction, and it will come out. Just wait.
It's important to remember that USDT.D's movements are inversely correlated with the broader cryptocurrency market, making this a crucial movement to monitor for trades.
The USD currency pairs generally outline a pattern inverse with the crypto futures trading pattern.
The stochastic RSI (StochRSI) is an indicator used to compare the price to its price range to predict price turning points, and momentum for overbought and oversold positions.
An oversold condition is indicated by the StochRSI value that is below 0.2. It means that trading is at the lower range, and a downward momentum may soon be exhausted for the impending upward turn to occur.
Conversely, a value of more than 0.8 implies an overbought market condition. The indication is that an impending downward turn may soon occur after an upward momentum is exhausted.
When using the Stoch RSI, overbought and oversold work best when trading along with the underlying trend. During an uptrend, look for oversold conditions for points of entry. During a downtrend, look for overbought conditions for points of entry.
The MACD series is the difference between a "fast" (short period) exponential moving average (EMA), and a "slow" (longer period) EMA of the price series. The average series (signal) is an EMA of the MACD series itself.
The D in MACD, "divergence" refers to the two underlying moving averages drifting apart, while C for "convergence" refers to the two underlying moving averages coming towards each other.
The significance of events on the MACD is taken as indication that the trendline is about to accelerate in the direction of price movement. Such events include:
• the MACD line crossing the signal line (convergence); that is, when the divergence (the bar graph) changes sign. • the MACD line and signal line both crossing the average line (zero axis).
The indication is put in the context of situations where the MACD line does not conform to the price movement, e.g. a price low is not accompanied by a low of the MACD.
The interpretation of such events and situations is to compare:
When"signal-line crossover" occurs - when the MACD and average lines cross. If the MACD line crosses down through the average line (a "bearish" crossover), or if it crosses up through the average line (a "bullish" crossover).
When "bearish convergence" or "bullish convergence" occurs - when the price makes a new low and the MACD confirms with a new low of its own; or when the price makes a new high and the MACD confirms with a new high of its own.