Recently, there have been many inquiries about ETH price trends, such as "Is MACD above zero a bullish signal?" and "Should I cut losses after a failed second surge?" These questions are almost flooding the screens every day. It’s clear that this wave of market movement has confused many investors.
In fact, this oscillating market secretly hides three common pitfalls. Without careful discernment, you could be easily harvested by the main players at any moment. I call these the "Devil Signals" because they often disguise themselves as positive signals, luring you into the market.
Looking at the 4-hour K-line chart, the white and yellow MACD lines are indeed above zero, which is generally a good sign. But the problem lies in the momentum histogram — it’s shrinking with each bar. This is called "volume-price divergence," in simple terms: the price is still rising, but the force driving the increase is weakening. It’s like throwing a ball upward; it’s still going up, but the speed is slowing down, and eventually, it will fall. When this signal appears, a correction is highly likely. If you stubbornly chase the high, you’re actively stepping into someone else’s trap.
**Second Pitfall: Abnormal Order Ratio and Price Range Lock**
ETH has been fluctuating within the 3180 to 3310 range recently, which seems to have support and resistance, and that’s normal. But the details in the order book are worth examining: above 3300, there are massive sell orders stacked up, while below 3180, only scattered buy orders, and the order ratio has been negative for a long time. This isn’t a natural market phenomenon; it’s the main players "drawing a frame." They control the price within this range, repeatedly oscillating it to make retail investors buy high and sell low, gradually eroding your capital.
**Third Pitfall: Technical Uptrend, Capital Flows Out**
Although the chart looks decent, the real important capital movements tell a different story. The direction of block trades, whale addresses’ activity, exchange inflows and outflows — these details are rarely noticed but often reveal more than the candlestick chart itself.
The key now is to stay alert. Don’t be blinded by a single indicator, and don’t bet all your chips on one direction. The market will continue to oscillate, and opportunities will keep appearing, but only if you survive to see the next wave.
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gm_or_ngmi
· 4h ago
It's the same old story, I knew the indicators were misleading all along.
View OriginalReply0
SchrodingerWallet
· 01-10 16:02
Damn, it's the same pattern again. I saw the main force drawing the boxes a long time ago, but I didn't set a stop-loss haha.
View OriginalReply0
UnluckyValidator
· 01-08 20:52
Oh my, it's the same trick again. The main players really have all kinds of tricks up their sleeves.
I was wondering why I get cut every day; it turns out these devil signals are causing trouble.
Funds are fleeing, but the charts still look good. This move is really clever.
I should have looked at whale addresses instead of just focusing on the candlestick charts.
This time, I’ve truly gained insight, but it's still easy to get caught in a trap.
View OriginalReply0
ForkThisDAO
· 01-08 20:51
The part where the main force draws the box hit me. I look at charts every day and end up getting cut the hardest.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeVictim
· 01-08 20:47
It's the same old story, every day someone asks about MACD, it's really annoying.
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The main force still uses the old trick of drawing boxes, and some people still fall for it.
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No one really pays attention to the capital outflow; the K-line is just a bluff.
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Living to see the next wave is the real thing; this wave is really quite risky.
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When 3300 was smashed down, I knew something was wrong; there was a massive sell order piling up.
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I haven't paid attention to the shrinking MACD bars; no wonder I always felt powerless when chasing highs.
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Instead of looking at these signals, it's better to ask what the whales are doing—that's the real truth.
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Retail traders are messing around in the boxes, while the main force is eating comfortably.
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It's a good saying not to bet on a direction, but I just can't control it.
View OriginalReply0
FlyingLeek
· 01-08 20:46
Coming back with this again? Last time, MACD also said the same, and then it suddenly surged by 20%
View OriginalReply0
BearMarketBuilder
· 01-08 20:45
The main force's current tactic of cutting losses is really amazing, damn it.
View OriginalReply0
MetaMisery
· 01-08 20:37
It's the same story again; retail investors are always the last to know the truth.
Recently, there have been many inquiries about ETH price trends, such as "Is MACD above zero a bullish signal?" and "Should I cut losses after a failed second surge?" These questions are almost flooding the screens every day. It’s clear that this wave of market movement has confused many investors.
In fact, this oscillating market secretly hides three common pitfalls. Without careful discernment, you could be easily harvested by the main players at any moment. I call these the "Devil Signals" because they often disguise themselves as positive signals, luring you into the market.
**First Pitfall: MACD Momentum Histogram Divergence**
Looking at the 4-hour K-line chart, the white and yellow MACD lines are indeed above zero, which is generally a good sign. But the problem lies in the momentum histogram — it’s shrinking with each bar. This is called "volume-price divergence," in simple terms: the price is still rising, but the force driving the increase is weakening. It’s like throwing a ball upward; it’s still going up, but the speed is slowing down, and eventually, it will fall. When this signal appears, a correction is highly likely. If you stubbornly chase the high, you’re actively stepping into someone else’s trap.
**Second Pitfall: Abnormal Order Ratio and Price Range Lock**
ETH has been fluctuating within the 3180 to 3310 range recently, which seems to have support and resistance, and that’s normal. But the details in the order book are worth examining: above 3300, there are massive sell orders stacked up, while below 3180, only scattered buy orders, and the order ratio has been negative for a long time. This isn’t a natural market phenomenon; it’s the main players "drawing a frame." They control the price within this range, repeatedly oscillating it to make retail investors buy high and sell low, gradually eroding your capital.
**Third Pitfall: Technical Uptrend, Capital Flows Out**
Although the chart looks decent, the real important capital movements tell a different story. The direction of block trades, whale addresses’ activity, exchange inflows and outflows — these details are rarely noticed but often reveal more than the candlestick chart itself.
The key now is to stay alert. Don’t be blinded by a single indicator, and don’t bet all your chips on one direction. The market will continue to oscillate, and opportunities will keep appearing, but only if you survive to see the next wave.