GateUser-de2a15eb

vip
Age 0.1 Year
Peak Tier 0
Enjoy organizing chaotic markets into graphics: structure, symmetry, boundaries. Research tokenomics and incentive compatibility.
I used to fantasize about going all-in, visually it looks like a straight line, it's exhilarating, but my sleep quality fluctuates along with it... Now I prefer grid/DCA, like dividing noise into small segments, with clearer boundaries, at least I won't instinctively reach for my phone when I wake up in the middle of the night.
Recently, the group has been discussing stablecoin regulation, reserve audits, and various "de-anchoring" short essays. Honestly, this kind of sentiment is most likely to push people into going all-in or completely clearing their positions. Anyway, my rule for myself is
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This week, just watch the two lines of the U.S.-Iran situation and the Federal Reserve; don't force a single position.
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ShrimpTeacher
Good morning everyone, a new week and a new start.
This Wednesday will also be the end time of the 2-week temporary ceasefire between the US and Iran. And the latest news shows that the US negotiation representatives have already departed for Pakistan, where the second round of US-Iran talks will be held on the 21st local time. After that, Iran refused, leading to uncertainties in the current US-Iran negotiations. The market is currently waiting and watching, to see whether Iran will send representatives to hold talks. Also, tomorrow in US Eastern Time is the Federal Reserve nominee hearing for Chairman Powell, so it’s also necessary to pay more attention. Therefore, currently the overall market is relatively stable, with smaller fluctuations, mainly ranging and moving sideways.
Overall, the market trend this week is still mainly driven by the news. Especially as US-Iran developments enter a more special period—whether it will be continued talks to ease tensions and resolve conflict, or whether the conflict will further escalate—I personally think this will be an important turning point, and it will have a major impact on the global economy and financial markets. With signals unclear, in the near term, trading will still mainly be short-term volatility.
From the current trend, in the short term the overall market is fluctuating in the 73000-76000 range. ETH’s short-term fluctuation range is 2220-2350. SOL’s fluctuation range is 82-86. When trading, remember to pay more attention to news. During the US-Iran time period, it’s very easy for many false messages and reversal possibilities to appear.
Short-term futures contract strategies:
BTC: 74000 or buy on dips, take profit at 75500
ETH: 2270 or buy on dips, take profit at 2330
SOL: 84 or short on rallies, take profit at 86
Warm tips:
1. Stop-loss suggestions should be set based on your actual liquidation price and the principal you can afford to lose.
2. Don’t be greedy—take profits and lock them in. It’s better to take a small loss than to hold out against a position. If the direction is right, continue holding.
$SOL $ETH $BTC
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Wishing for world peace +1.
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Short selling is also risky; the market manipulators can trigger a sudden drop and wipe you out.
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SituLieqiMarketTrend
LYN's dog pool holds 99% of the chips. From your perspective, do you go long or short? Looking for some advice.
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Lately, I’ve been feeling that RWA on-chain can get a bit complicated: the “liquidity” on-chain often looks like a mirror—when you draw it, it’s pretty round—but once you hit the redemption window, priority, fees, and the suspension clauses stacking on top of each other, the boundaries immediately warp. To put it plainly, just because you can buy in the secondary market doesn’t mean you can always redeem the underlying assets whenever you want at net asset value; many protocols hide the most critical “gates” in the fine print.
I’ll also admit I’m a little envious of others holding seemingly st
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Lately, I've been a bit obsessed with DAO proposals... On the surface, they're discussing "how to spend funds," but secretly, it's about who gets to make the decisions and who can keep receiving incentives. Many proposals tie voting rights and subsidies together, essentially raising the cost of opposition, leaving only the same group of people nodding at each other.
On-chain activity is also quite interesting. I just saw a transaction where 0x7b3…c21 sent 3,200 ETH to a multi-signature wallet, and two hours later, the exchange's hot wallet moved a bunch of U tokens. The group was already shout
ETH2.7%
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This sentence is very true: not just profit, in the end only screenshots remain.
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CryptoSat
Cut some profits ... $SUPER is not Super anymore 👌
#SUPER#
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This level of repricing is usually accompanied by macro capital shifts and narrative reshaping, and the time window may be longer than expected.
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Coinstages
🏛️ THE GREAT REPRICING: ANALYST PREDICTS XRP AT THE CENTER OF HISTORIC WEALTH TRANSFER 💰
several prominent market analysts are signaling that XRP is on the verge of a "structural repricing" that could trigger one of the greatest wealth transfers in modern financial history.
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Using the ChainOn browser, the more I look, the more it seems like using a magnifying glass to examine someone else's ledger... To be honest, the so-called "privacy" on public blockchains is inherently very limited; at most, it's just replacing names with addresses. Truly tracing back is just a matter of time and cost. The boundary of compliance is also quite realistic: if platforms require you to do KYC, don't expect to remain completely anonymous; once you reach fiat on-ramps and off-ramps, you're basically back in the rules of the real world.
Recently, there's been talk about interest rate
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The sell orders are too obvious at the high point; a weak rebound = a money-losing trend? But we still need to wait for confirmation.
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LedgerBull
$UP showing mild weakness with fading upside momentum.
Structure remains bearish with sellers defending local highs.
EP
0.1680 – 0.1720
TP
TP1 0.1640
TP2 0.1600
TP3 0.1550
SL
0.1760
Liquidity above 0.172 remains untapped while price continues forming lower highs. Weak reactions on bounces suggest continuation to the downside if resistance holds.
Let’s go $UP ‌
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These days, I've seen the funding rates spike to pretty extreme levels again, and a bunch of people are starting to shout "the counterparty is just giving away money." I’d rather first scale back the chart a notch: where are the boundaries, who’s being pushed out, don’t rush to be a hero before you see clearly. Honestly, extreme rates are more about the market pulling on the structure, not an "answer to the direction." I usually have two options: either take a small position to go against the trend with a tight stop-loss; or simply avoid the volatility, waiting for it to return from the extrem
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The idea of taking partial profits at target prices is good; don't try to eat the whole thing in one bite.
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LedgerBull
$DOGE5S showing strong upside reaction after reclaiming local lows.
Buyers stepping in with structure shifting bullish on lower timeframes.
EP
0.49 - 0.51
TP
TP1 0.55
TP2 0.58
TP3 0.62
SL
0.46
Liquidity below 0.46 was swept before a sharp reversal, confirming accumulation. Strong impulsive move and higher lows suggest continuation to the upside as long as buyers maintain control.
Let’s go $DOGE5S ‌
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I've been diving for a long time, but I still want to add a comment: When it comes to options, to put it simply, time is the fee. As a buyer, the time value is decreasing every day, and even if the market doesn't move, you're still losing; as a seller, you're earning that "waiting for nothing" money, but once a big wave really hits, that slowly accumulated profit might be wiped out in one go, and maybe more.
Recently, everyone has been watching large transfers on the chain and unusual movements in exchange hot and cold wallets, shouting "smart money is coming/going." I also watch, but mostly t
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If it can retest the bottom and then move up, that is the standard script for a strong trend.
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CryptoSat
$ENJ went from 0.017 to 0.08 like a rocket! 🚀
Right now, price is sitting near the top around 0.077–0.08, which is a natural area where early buyers start taking profits. That’s why you’ll often see either a pullback or sideways consolidation after such a move.
Yes, the trend is clearly bullish — no doubt. But entering after a vertical candle is risky because you’re chasing, not positioning early.
A healthier scenario would be Price pulls back, forms a base, then continues upward. That’s how strong trends build.
If it directly continues without cooling down, it becomes even more volatile — meaning fast gains but also sharp drops.
Targets like 0.09 – 0.13 are possible if momentum continues, but expecting straight move without pauses is unrealistic.
Right now it’s not about hype — it’s about patience and timing.
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Recently, I've seen a bunch of people watching large on-chain transfers and fluctuations in exchange hot and cold wallets, then repeatedly saying "Smart money is here"… Honestly, it's a bit funny and a bit frustrating. Just because money is moving doesn't mean the direction is correct; it might just be moved to a different drawer.
Don't be scared by terms like data availability, ordering, or finality. I'll focus on one main point: the transaction you see, is it "something everyone can access the same data for," or "just someone saw it first"; is it "ordered by who," or "really can't be reverse
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