BreadthHunter

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Two-thirds completed, don't be greedy next, raise SL according to the rules.
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CryptoSat
$ON 2ND TARGET COMPLETED 🎯
Stoploss to entry once 3rd Target hits 👍
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Lately, I've been looking at the APY of yield aggregators again. When the number gets high, I also get tempted, but then I calm down and think: this thing isn't "falling from the sky." Behind it is a series of contract layers, along with routing, lending pools, market-making positions, and in some places, it's actually a gamble on the counterparty not messing up. To put it simply, APY shows the result, but the risk is hidden in the process: who holds the permissions, how the emergency switch is set, whether the source of income relies on subsidies, whether liquidation and slippage can withstan
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Last night, I made a bad trade. After reviewing, it wasn't that I misjudged the direction, but that I underestimated slippage and depth. Thinking "it's just this amount," I found the order book was as thin as paper. I placed the order in two parts, and on the second attempt, I directly pushed my price up too high... To put it simply, my order placement was too hasty, I didn't wait for the order book to replenish, nor did I test the market with a small order first.
Now I set a small rule for myself: for pools with poor liquidity, I’d rather wait a little longer, first use small orders to observ
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Recently, I've seen a bunch of people watching whale addresses and copying trades. I get tempted myself, but before taking action, I need to think clearly: Are they building a position or hedging? Many "large buy-ins" are accompanied by futures shorts/loans, so the net exposure isn't as much as you think. If you follow in, you're just riding the wave for others... Honestly, understanding the position structure is more important than looking at transfer screenshots.
These days, hardware wallets are out of stock, phishing links are everywhere. I almost clicked on one, and suddenly I had the ur
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Thanks for organizing. Looking at 4H, there are indeed no unilateral positions; let's treat it as a box.
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AlleyLittleOverlord
SOL 4-hour trend analysis, sharing trading ideas for high sell and low buy within the range
Friends following $SOL should pay close attention to the current 4-hour level trend. The market is currently forming an expanding wedge pattern, with a clear overall oscillating structure. Short-term trading opportunities are straightforward, and here is a precise set of trading reference levels.
First, look at the core support, focusing on the 86-85 range. This position is a key point where previous highs and lows switch, and it also coincides with short-term moving averages, forming a confluence of technical support. It is a strong support zone with multiple technical resonances. If the market retraces to this range later, it is an excellent bullish trading point. Once stabilized, traders can seize short-term bullish opportunities with clear risk control, making operations safer.
Next, look at the resistance above. Short-term resistance is concentrated around the 90-91 range. This is the current stage resistance zone. When the market rebounds to this level, it is likely to face selling pressure and pull back, making it suitable to take profits and exit promptly.
Overall, SOL has not yet formed a clear unilateral trend in the short term. It is entirely possible to implement a high sell and low buy strategy around the core range of 85-90. Buy on dips at support, take profits at rebound resistance, strictly control position sizes and stop-losses, and align with the current oscillating trend for short-term trading. This approach will significantly improve profit probabilities.
Once the market breaks through the range, adjust trading strategies accordingly. For now, focus on these two key zones, avoid blindly chasing rallies or panicking at dips, and steadily capture profits in the oscillating market!
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If we can obtain this funding, we can be more aggressive in computing power procurement, training iterations, and global expansion.
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CryptoFrontier
DeepSeek Launches First External Fundraising Round Amid Core Staff Departures
DeepSeek Confirms First External Fundraising
On April 18, multiple venture capital sources confirmed that DeepSeek has begun its first external fundraising round, according to澎湃新闻 (Pail News). The company is targeting a valuation exceeding $10 billion and plans to raise at least $300 million to
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OK, low-frequency operations on the weekend, don't lose too much even if you can't make a profit.
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CurrencyGodfather
Weekend off, everyone trades on their own.
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Recently, I’ve seen a bunch of people talking about LSTs and re-staking again. Basically, the main sources of yield are twofold: one is the original staking interest, and the other is the extra subsidy gained from lending out the “security/credit” (fees, incentives, tokens from project teams). It sounds pretty attractive, but the risks also stack up: if the underlying validators/nodes get penalized, or if the contracts and intermediaries involved in re-staking have issues, it could lead to a chain reaction. The most annoying part is that once correlations increase, what looks diversified norma
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Weekend market conditions are prone to surprises, especially with variables like the US-Iran negotiations that can "tweet" at any time. Use leverage cautiously.
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ShrimpTeacher
Good morning everyone, it’s already Friday today.
From the latest news, Trump announced that both Israel and Lebanon agreed to a 10-day ceasefire. For the market, this is good news, and it also matches market expectations. Next, the key focus will be on the developments in the US-Iran negotiations. In Trump’s updates, he also said that a second round of US-Iran talks may be held this weekend, and that progress has been made on the Iranian side. As for whether the US-Iran ceasefire time will be extended, it is still pending and undecided. Therefore, this weekend is relatively special, and the overall market will still face relatively large volatility. In terms of trading, you need to pay attention to the US-Iran developments.
Secondly, looking at the overall market trend, the market continues to trade in a range-bound pattern. Just like yesterday’s analysis, overall it is fluctuating between 73,000 and 76,000. Personally, I believe today the market will continue to range, and the market is also waiting and watching for the follow-up related developments after US-Iran talks—such as whether the specific negotiation time will be set for this weekend, or whether it needs to be arranged for next week, and whether they can reach some basic consensus in principle on both sides. Therefore, in conditions where signals are not clear, it’s enough to do short-term swing trades within the short-term fluctuation range.
As for ETF institutional fund flows currently, yesterday there was a net outflow of about 40 million US dollars, and on the liquidation map, the BTC and ETH longs and shorts are relatively sparse, which is enough to show that the current market is relatively cautious and is in a waiting state. Meanwhile, SOL is currently bull-led and relatively dense, but because there have been many rebounds, it is now gradually pulling back. Long position 1 has already been liquidated—so you need to watch the risks.
As for Ethereum, its short-term fluctuation range is 2280-2380, and SOL’s short-term fluctuation range is 86-91.
Short-term contract strategy:
BTC: 74000 or go long on dips, take profit at 75500
ETH: 2300 or go long on dips, take profit at 2380
SOL: 89 or short on rallies, take profit at 86.5
Warm reminder:
1. Stop-loss suggestions should be set according to your personal actual liquidation price and the principal amount you personally can afford to lose.
2. Don’t be greedy—take profits. It’s better to take a small loss than to hold a position through it. If the direction is correct, continue to hold.
$ETH $SOL $BTC
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Lately, when I look at the market, I tend to focus more on interest rate expectations and the sentiment on the dollar side. To put it simply, when risk appetite contracts, the correlation in the crypto space suddenly increases, and all sectors seem to struggle at once. My approach is pretty straightforward: treat my position as a "risk budget," and when macro conditions are tight, reduce leverage, keep some stablecoins for opportunities, and avoid stubbornly holding through emotional swings. I later realized I used to rely too much on candlestick charts to explain everything; in fact, many tim
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Don't be fooled by the VIP threshold; the core factors are still liquidity and exit channels, with activities just serving as a gimmick boost.
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BraveBullsAreNotAfra
Gate News Report, April 15 — Compared to last year, the VIP access requirements for the TRUMP memecoin event held at Mar-a-Lago have been significantly lowered, approximately by 90%. This year's VIP qualification requires holding tokens worth about $300,000, down from around $3 million dollars during last year's event cycle, indicating weakened demand for the token and its associated privileges.
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Recently, when looking at projects on RWA (Real World Asset) on the blockchain, that bit of "liquidity" on-chain sometimes really looks like a spotlight: the pool seems deep, but if the redemption terms say "subject to review/queue/at window/pausable," you know that when pressure comes, they’ll probably lock the gates first and then explain. Frankly, on-chain just makes the share accounting transparent; the underlying asset redemption pace is still the old-world way.
I used to be quite stubborn, thinking "I only look at what's on-chain" was enough, but I was later educated: what you see on-c
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I was so stupid yesterday: thinking "just this one trade" and chasing into a pool with average depth, but ended up with slippage eating up the full amount, and the execution price was quite a bit off from the "theoretical price" on that candlestick I saw... To put it simply, it’s not about the wrong direction, but about the timing of the order and misjudging the depth. After reviewing, there are two points: first, look at how much volume the order book/pool can actually absorb, don’t just focus on the price; splitting orders + waiting a beat is more reliable than rushing in all at once, especi
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