These past two weeks, I've been watching NEAR's order book closely, and today I must bring this discovery to light—this token seems to be brewing for a big move.
Have you noticed that no matter how the market fluctuates, NEAR appears to be locked inside a "symmetrical triangle" pattern, rubbing back and forth? The volatility is ridiculously low, almost to the point of making one suspect that the main players are suppressing the price. Actually, this is a key signal. The logic of a symmetrical triangle is simple: the price is tightly confined between two inclined trendlines—resistance above preventing it from rising and support below preventing it from falling—and these two lines are gradually converging, squeezing the entire trading range narrower and narrower. It's like a compressed spring; the more potential energy it accumulates, the more explosive the release when it finally breaks out. In my 10 years of experience in the crypto space, I've seen many patterns, but once this "power-building signal" breaks, it often marks the start of a new trend.
Here's the crucial point. The recent two weeks of order book details are quite interesting—every time NEAR's price dips to the lower boundary of the triangle, large funds immediately "snap up" the buy orders. This isn't small retail traders making minor moves; it's real capital capable of instantly pushing the price up. What does this indicate? It's not that there's no support below; rather, someone is actively absorbing selling pressure. If you ask me whether this is the main players secretly accumulating, I find it hard to believe otherwise.
But risk always comes first. Once the price breaks below the lower boundary, the pattern is immediately invalidated, and you need to adjust your strategy right away. So the most important tip is: never go all-in on a single position. Leave yourself room to adapt—that's the way to survive longer.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
7 Likes
Reward
7
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
RugpullAlertOfficer
· 17h ago
The symmetric triangle pattern I’m already very familiar with, but NEAR’s recent move to absorb the supply is indeed quite aggressive.
---
Both suppressing the price and main force accumulating, maybe it’s just a storytelling tactic? Still, we need to look at the trading volume when breaking the support.
---
All-in betting fools, I truly believe this.
---
Is NEAR’s lower boundary really that strong? It seems to me like it’s also loosening.
---
The spring will eventually release, but I’m worried that when it does, there might be no significant rally, just a false move.
---
This kind of pattern is seen every day, and 99% of the time it’s just a trick to suppress and then escape.
---
Someone quickly absorbing the supply might also be bottom-fishing. How about thinking in reverse?
View OriginalReply0
Rekt_Recovery
· 01-06 15:42
ngl the triangle compression thing hits different when you've already blown up twice on pattern plays... but yeah that whale buying on dips is giving something. just remember - i learned this the hard way with 3x leverage lmao
Reply0
BlockchainNewbie
· 01-05 12:22
对称三角形压不住了,这次NEAR真的要起飞了,主力吸筹的迹象太明显
Reply0
CountdownToBroke
· 01-05 00:51
Listening to your advice is better than reading ten years of charts. If this symmetrical triangle truly breaks out, we’ll be flying high and eating well.
View OriginalReply0
SellLowExpert
· 01-05 00:49
Hmm, I'm tired of the symmetrical triangle pattern. Every time it says it will break out, but then it keeps bouncing back. I wonder how many people have been trapped in it.
View OriginalReply0
GasWrangler
· 01-05 00:48
ngl, the symmetric triangle narrative is mathematically sound, but you're missing the actual on-chain data that proves this. if you actually analyze the mempool activity during those "support bounces," the transaction throughput tells a completely different story than your eyeball analysis.
Reply0
GasFeeTherapist
· 01-05 00:35
No matter how tight the spring is compressed, you have to watch the breakout point timing. I can't go all-in on this move.
These past two weeks, I've been watching NEAR's order book closely, and today I must bring this discovery to light—this token seems to be brewing for a big move.
Have you noticed that no matter how the market fluctuates, NEAR appears to be locked inside a "symmetrical triangle" pattern, rubbing back and forth? The volatility is ridiculously low, almost to the point of making one suspect that the main players are suppressing the price. Actually, this is a key signal. The logic of a symmetrical triangle is simple: the price is tightly confined between two inclined trendlines—resistance above preventing it from rising and support below preventing it from falling—and these two lines are gradually converging, squeezing the entire trading range narrower and narrower. It's like a compressed spring; the more potential energy it accumulates, the more explosive the release when it finally breaks out. In my 10 years of experience in the crypto space, I've seen many patterns, but once this "power-building signal" breaks, it often marks the start of a new trend.
Here's the crucial point. The recent two weeks of order book details are quite interesting—every time NEAR's price dips to the lower boundary of the triangle, large funds immediately "snap up" the buy orders. This isn't small retail traders making minor moves; it's real capital capable of instantly pushing the price up. What does this indicate? It's not that there's no support below; rather, someone is actively absorbing selling pressure. If you ask me whether this is the main players secretly accumulating, I find it hard to believe otherwise.
But risk always comes first. Once the price breaks below the lower boundary, the pattern is immediately invalidated, and you need to adjust your strategy right away. So the most important tip is: never go all-in on a single position. Leave yourself room to adapt—that's the way to survive longer.