Brothers, do you want to know why you buy a coin and fall, play people for suckers, and he rises?
Let's talk about something interesting now, something that almost everyone has experienced. When trading, it always seems that the price falls as soon as you buy in, grit your teeth and bear the pain, play people for suckers, and then as soon as it's done, it rises back up. It's probably similar to being watched by someone, so much so that you have the illusion of Reverse manipulating the market yourself.
When you want to sell, you may still not be able to escape similar traps. In fact, market makers are watching you, and there are transaction records behind every price on the candlestick chart. There will always be someone buying at a certain level and selling at another, which is one of the greatest values in introducing quantitative thinking into the investment field. You can use historical data to analyze. If you keep trading with the same logic from the past to now, you can calculate the probability of being trapped at the peak based on objective historical data rather than relying on subjective impressions.
Of course, this trap is not omnipotent. Just because history is a certain way does not mean that the future will be the same. However, at least using this statistical method can help people get rid of a misconception. If the Market Maker is really watching those few small orders from you, I think the Market Maker won't even be able to afford the rent. #BTC #GateioInto11 #ETH
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.
Brothers, do you want to know why you buy a coin and fall, play people for suckers, and he rises?
Let's talk about something interesting now, something that almost everyone has experienced.
When trading, it always seems that the price falls as soon as you buy in, grit your teeth and bear the pain, play people for suckers, and then as soon as it's done, it rises back up. It's probably similar to being watched by someone, so much so that you have the illusion of Reverse manipulating the market yourself.
When you want to sell, you may still not be able to escape similar traps. In fact, market makers are watching you, and there are transaction records behind every price on the candlestick chart. There will always be someone buying at a certain level and selling at another, which is one of the greatest values in introducing quantitative thinking into the investment field. You can use historical data to analyze. If you keep trading with the same logic from the past to now, you can calculate the probability of being trapped at the peak based on objective historical data rather than relying on subjective impressions.
Of course, this trap is not omnipotent. Just because history is a certain way does not mean that the future will be the same. However, at least using this statistical method can help people get rid of a misconception. If the Market Maker is really watching those few small orders from you, I think the Market Maker won't even be able to afford the rent. #BTC #GateioInto11 #ETH