#BeginnerTrader , please 🙏. It is really painful to read how you are losing your money by listening to other people. In most cases those people are not even a scammers, often they are misguided as well.
Do not even take financial advice from me. After reading any of my articles, go and research topic further and make your own conclusions.
💡A Beginner’s Guide to Building Your Binance Portfolio
#quinn_tips #BeginnerTrader Many beginners on Binance Square seem unsure of how to start and end up following others’ strategies and signals blindly, often losing their capital within a month. This guide is here to help you avoid those pitfalls with a balanced, step-by-step approach to setting up a portfolio that works for both learning and long-term growth. 1) Set Up a Long-Term Portfolio Allocate 20-50% of Your Funds: Use this portion of your funds for gradual, long-term investments in the mo
It actually works quite reliably during last 7 or so days on $ETH . I’ve been just selling short at price test previous session high level and closed (partially) during the day at the opposite line. It didn’t work though yesterday, but I didn’t care, I’ve been holding position from previous days. It mostly works in ranging market or slow trend - in which case direction does not even matter much - I’m shorting while price on higher timeframe slowly crawls up. I’m not making crazy X-es to deposit, I don’t risk with high leverage. Just enjoying few percent per day increase 😅. Just a disclaimer I don’t know yet how it is going to work in stronger trend, and I’m testing only on $ETH
A Strategy I Use for $ETH Futures in Ranging Markets
If you’ve traded $ETH futures, you know how volatile and unpredictable its price action can be. In my experience it is more volatile and unpredictable even compared to $SOL and $BTC. Other SMC-type tools like supply-demand zones, order blocks, and FVGs often fall short due to frequent overshoots, leading to false signals and stop-loss hits. ❗️IMPORTANT❗️I advise you to stay away from futures, especially if you are beginner ❗️This strategy can as well be applied to spot trading liquid coins. If you are just starting read my other article That said, I’ve found a time-based strategy that works quite well for me, especially in ranging markets. This approach draws on concepts from ICT (Inner Circle Trader), which, in my opinion, falls into the same category of strategies as SMC (Smart Money Concepts) and others. While I don’t consider any of these approaches a “holy grail,” certain elements—like the time component—stand out as effective. In a way this strategy is just variation of support/resistance trading, which sometimes can provide more accurate entry/exit points. How the Strategy Works 1. Mark Key Levels Each morning, I identify the highest and lowest prices $ETH reaches between NY 18:00 and 00:00 (including wicks). I draw horizontal lines at these levels to serve as potential liquidity points. 2. Watch for Tests During the London session or NY AM session, price often tests one of these levels. When it does, I aim to trade from that level towards the opposite. 3. Look for Volume Confirmation Before entering a trade, I often seek volume-based confirmation. For a long trade, I like to see higher volume in green candles, and for a short trade, higher volume in red candles. This helps validate the level being tested. 4. Use Candle Patterns with Caution While I find candle patterns often unreliable, they can still provide valuable confirmation when used in conjunction with key levels and volume. I don’t rely on them in isolation but use them as an extra layer of confidence. Combining volume signals with key levels has significantly improved my confidence in entries. 5. Second Chance Entries Price frequently tests these levels twice—once during the London session and again during NY AM. If I miss the first test, the second often offers another opportunity for a solid entry. It also means I usually don’t exit trade if price reverses for retest. Actually it is even safer to enter on second test. 6. Accept Minor Overshoots Price may overshoot or undershoot slightly, but in most cases, the wicks reach these marked levels. Patience and candle patterns are key here. This strategy isn’t foolproof—especially in trending markets where it can miss entries or backfire—but it works reliably in more than half of cases during ranging conditions. I will test it in a trends and maybe write results as I am ready. It’s important to note that this is based solely on my personal experience and opinion. As with any trading approach, standard risk management practices—such as correct position sizing and stop-loss placement—are critical to managing potential losses. I’m actually holding a short from the 3152 right now. I believe price can overshoot to 3180 in which case I add to the trade. I will take partial profit around 3040 and 3015.
Don’t trust me blindly. Back test it with smallest possible position size. And remember it may fail if market goes out of the range to continue trend or reverses - we have stop losses to catch that. I’m aware that 20-30 trades I made following it is not enough to be completely sure, but we also should remember that market is inherently unpredictable anyway and always implement RM. But on the other hand I’m so confident that I didn’t quit from the trade today when saw $SOL getting higher even though they are correlated assets in my opinion. One more thing, I’m trading NY hours, sometimes EU. I don’t have an opinion about how to apply it to overnight hours. Well these experiments also indirectly prove that “smar money” are actually interested in ETH which also may mean bright future for Ethereum in a long run. 😀 Would you like me to elaborate on any details about this strategy? Check out #quinn_tips for more educational content. $ETH #ETH🔥🔥🔥🔥
I’m not big believer in all sorts of flags, but what is this shape $ETH is painting if not a bear flag?
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Quinn Angelia Pullens
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I keep shorting $ETH . Hope I won’t regret it 😅. My realized profit is actually twice of what is on screenshot, since I daily take partial profit at lows and increase position at highs. That’s why average entry point is changing.
I keep shorting $ETH . Hope I won’t regret it 😅. My realized profit is actually twice of what is on screenshot, since I daily take partial profit at lows and increase position at highs. That’s why average entry point is changing.
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Quinn Angelia Pullens
--
هابط
I do believe that downtrend will continue.
$ETH will complete head shoulders knees and toes pattern 😂 $SOL and $BTC will drop too.
Main indicator which tells me that is volume. Secondary - head and shoulders. Also - USA’s and global politics
My short position on ETH is behaving well for few days already, I’m just taking partial profit at lows and selling more at highs.
Just try not to wipe your account save some USDT to go crypto shopping on black Friday. 😀🛒
I feel sad for people who lose money in the market. But. Why would they pretend they can teach others? Why would you follow their advice? $ETH $BTC $SOL #BeginnerTrader
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Quinn Angelia Pullens
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❗️Do Not Take Financial Advice from Strangers
#BeginnerTrader , please 🙏. It is really painful to read how you are losing your money by listening to other people. In most cases those people are not even a scammers, often they are misguided as well.
Do not even take financial advice from me. After reading any of my articles, go and research topic further and make your own conclusions.
$ETH will complete head shoulders knees and toes pattern 😂 $SOL and $BTC will drop too.
Main indicator which tells me that is volume. Secondary - head and shoulders. Also - USA’s and global politics
My short position on ETH is behaving well for few days already, I’m just taking partial profit at lows and selling more at highs.
Just try not to wipe your account save some USDT to go crypto shopping on black Friday. 😀🛒
I may be wrong. For that case I use a stop-loss 😇
LIVE
Quinn Angelia Pullens
--
A Strategy I Use for $ETH Futures in Ranging Markets
If you’ve traded $ETH futures, you know how volatile and unpredictable its price action can be. In my experience it is more volatile and unpredictable even compared to $SOL and $BTC. Other SMC-type tools like supply-demand zones, order blocks, and FVGs often fall short due to frequent overshoots, leading to false signals and stop-loss hits. ❗️IMPORTANT❗️I advise you to stay away from futures, especially if you are beginner ❗️This strategy can as well be applied to spot trading liquid coins. If you are just starting read my other article That said, I’ve found a time-based strategy that works quite well for me, especially in ranging markets. This approach draws on concepts from ICT (Inner Circle Trader), which, in my opinion, falls into the same category of strategies as SMC (Smart Money Concepts) and others. While I don’t consider any of these approaches a “holy grail,” certain elements—like the time component—stand out as effective. In a way this strategy is just variation of support/resistance trading, which sometimes can provide more accurate entry/exit points. How the Strategy Works 1. Mark Key Levels Each morning, I identify the highest and lowest prices $ETH reaches between NY 18:00 and 00:00 (including wicks). I draw horizontal lines at these levels to serve as potential liquidity points. 2. Watch for Tests During the London session or NY AM session, price often tests one of these levels. When it does, I aim to trade from that level towards the opposite. 3. Look for Volume Confirmation Before entering a trade, I often seek volume-based confirmation. For a long trade, I like to see higher volume in green candles, and for a short trade, higher volume in red candles. This helps validate the level being tested. 4. Use Candle Patterns with Caution While I find candle patterns often unreliable, they can still provide valuable confirmation when used in conjunction with key levels and volume. I don’t rely on them in isolation but use them as an extra layer of confidence. Combining volume signals with key levels has significantly improved my confidence in entries. 5. Second Chance Entries Price frequently tests these levels twice—once during the London session and again during NY AM. If I miss the first test, the second often offers another opportunity for a solid entry. It also means I usually don’t exit trade if price reverses for retest. Actually it is even safer to enter on second test. 6. Accept Minor Overshoots Price may overshoot or undershoot slightly, but in most cases, the wicks reach these marked levels. Patience and candle patterns are key here. This strategy isn’t foolproof—especially in trending markets where it can miss entries or backfire—but it works reliably in more than half of cases during ranging conditions. I will test it in a trends and maybe write results as I am ready. It’s important to note that this is based solely on my personal experience and opinion. As with any trading approach, standard risk management practices—such as correct position sizing and stop-loss placement—are critical to managing potential losses. I’m actually holding a short from the 3152 right now. I believe price can overshoot to 3180 in which case I add to the trade. I will take partial profit around 3040 and 3015.
Don’t trust me blindly. Back test it with smallest possible position size. And remember it may fail if market goes out of the range to continue trend or reverses - we have stop losses to catch that. I’m aware that 20-30 trades I made following it is not enough to be completely sure, but we also should remember that market is inherently unpredictable anyway and always implement RM. But on the other hand I’m so confident that I didn’t quit from the trade today when saw $SOL getting higher even though they are correlated assets in my opinion. One more thing, I’m trading NY hours, sometimes EU. I don’t have an opinion about how to apply it to overnight hours. Well these experiments also indirectly prove that “smar money” are actually interested in ETH which also may mean bright future for Ethereum in a long run. 😀 Would you like me to elaborate on any details about this strategy? Check out #quinn_tips for more educational content. $ETH #ETH🔥🔥🔥🔥
If head-shoulder-knees-and-toes pattern keeps developing, we will see more posts from so called crypto experts about wiped accounts, gorgeous chart analysts will start begging for one more dollar.
🪙 Why would you follow their advice ? 🪙 How do you determine who actually is a crypto expert? 🪙 Why talented chart artists cannot make a successful profitable trade?
A Strategy I Use for $ETH Futures in Ranging Markets
If you’ve traded $ETH futures, you know how volatile and unpredictable its price action can be. In my experience it is more volatile and unpredictable even compared to $SOL and $BTC. Other SMC-type tools like supply-demand zones, order blocks, and FVGs often fall short due to frequent overshoots, leading to false signals and stop-loss hits. ❗️IMPORTANT❗️I advise you to stay away from futures, especially if you are beginner ❗️This strategy can as well be applied to spot trading liquid coins. If y
📈 “The market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.” – John Maynard Keynes.
Markets are inherently unpredictable. No matter how good our strategy is, success rates will often hover around 50/50—perhaps improving slightly to 55/45 or 60/40 with experience.
✨This is why risk management matters more than the strategy itself.
Proper risk management ensures that when we’re wrong (and we will be wrong), the losses are controlled and manageable. Equally, when we’re right, we must have the confidence to maximise profits. It’s not about avoiding mistakes—it’s about making sure our wins outpace our losses over time.
I’m listening to workshop / interview with three professional, educated Fx ladies traders. They’ve been asked if they stop or hedge. What do you think they answered?
2 of 3 never hedge. One hedge sometimes for short term (within a day).
But we are retail crypto traders, hold our beer and see what we can do! Right? 😂🤣
Why Retail Traders Should Avoid Hedge Mode in Futures
#quinn_tips Hedge mode – holding both long and short positions on the same futures trading pair – might sound like a clever way to manage risk. But for beginners, it often adds more trouble than it’s worth. Here’s why: 1. Double Fees, Half the Gains: You’re essentially paying twice in fees, with no real boost to profits. Any gain from one position gets cancelled by losses on the other, which is a recipe for stagnant growth. 2. Added Complexity, Greater Risk of Mistakes: Managing two opposing positions needs solid experience and timing. For beginners, this extra complexity often leads to missteps, and one error can lead to costly results. 3. A Trap for Overtrading: Hedge mode tempts traders to keep adjusting positions, creating a cycle of overtrading and emotional decisions. These are exactly the patterns that hinder long-term success. Why Pros Can Hedge – But Retail Traders Should Think Twice Professional traders and institutions use hedging, but their strategies are miles away from the retail “hedge mode” approach. Market makers, for example, often rely on delta-neutral hedging strategies that make profits from price spread, arbitrage and volatility, rather than betting on price direction. Major holders and institutions might use temporary shorts or options collars around their assets, allowing them to lock in gains or control risk without having to sell their holdings. Honest Creators Share Their Hedge Mode Results – And It’s Not Pretty Some transparent creators on Binance Square have posted screenshots of their futures hedge positions, openly sharing their experiments with hedging. Time and again, these attempts ultimately lead to liquidation, showing that even experienced traders struggle to make hedge mode sustainable in the long run. Their transparency is a valuable lesson: hedge mode in futures isn’t a “safety net” for retail traders; it’s often a quick way to wipe out capital. If you’re starting out, focus on simple, one-way trades with clear risk management. A straightforward strategy will build a stronger foundation – without the complexity, costs, and risks that come with complicated hedges. $BTC $ETH $SOL
#quinn_tips have you ever seen candle stick patterns graphics? Now go to $ETH chart and count how many bullish engulfing candles it created on its way down 😂😂😂.
$ETH approaching a support zone around 2940-2960: 200-days SMA and so called CME gap. I don’t believe it will hold. But it will be smart to watch it and take profit from shorts around there. In worst case scenarios it may not even touch it.
My position is the same, I’m just adding to it at peaks and taking partial profits at bottoms, so avg. entry price drifts down and ROI shows only floating profit. I’m planning to add ar around 3130 unless something unexpected happens.
It is Friday and banks may want to pull it up to close week in profit.
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Quinn Angelia Pullens
--
هابط
I’m no expert but don’t average down your longs. I don’t think CME gap bottom is going to stop the free fall.
Dear readers. I hope you didn’t miss my recent article about hedging. This week I’m seeing wave of articles and posts on Square about different “smart” “hedging” strategies for us, retail traders.
I’m not saying hedging is wrong or it does not work. I’m saying it is much more complex than enabling hedge mode on futures or covering your spot holding with short.
If you try to implement these simplified “hedging” approaches you will fail, in worst case you will face liquidation, in best case you’ll miss profit. It will look like it works in a moment but such strategies will fail even in mid term. You don’t know greeks, statistics, normal and log normal distribution, derivatives and integrals. And even if you think you know them, most probably you don’t understand them as well as hedge funds and market makers and can’t apply them to finances. Moreover, you are missing essential tools used for hedging, like options write and low commissions. And you don’t have infinite supply of money like they do.
So what do we do to protect our capital?
1. Learn about Portfolio Management and money management. Diversify. 2. Don’t trade CFDs. If you want to trade them don’t use leverage. If you desperately want leverage, use 2x. 3. Apply risk management to your trades. Take profit, stop loss, don’t leave your trades unattended. 4. Enter and exit positions in stages. Don’t average down loosing trades. 5. If unsure - don’t trade. If you have headache or feel bad - don’t trade. Don’t overtrade. Don’t force trade. Don’t revenge trade. Don’t trade your hopes, trade what you see. 6. And leave complex hedging strategies to pros, we won’t be able to outsmart them.
If your capital is big and you trade big, you may need to apply complex hedging strategies. So you will learn them properly and you will see they are slightly more complex than long asset /short contract / long put.
Why Retail Traders Should Avoid Hedge Mode in Futures
#quinn_tips Hedge mode – holding both long and short positions on the same futures trading pair – might sound like a clever way to manage risk. But for beginners, it often adds more trouble than it’s worth. Here’s why: 1. Double Fees, Half the Gains: You’re essentially paying twice in fees, with no real boost to profits. Any gain from one position gets cancelled by losses on the other, which is a recipe for stagnant growth. 2. Added Complexity, Greater Risk of Mistakes: Managing two opposing positions needs solid experience and timing. For beginners, this extra complexity often leads to missteps, and one error can lead to costly results. 3. A Trap for Overtrading: Hedge mode tempts traders to keep adjusting positions, creating a cycle of overtrading and emotional decisions. These are exactly the patterns that hinder long-term success. Why Pros Can Hedge – But Retail Traders Should Think Twice Professional traders and institutions use hedging, but their strategies are miles away from the retail “hedge mode” approach. Market makers, for example, often rely on delta-neutral hedging strategies that make profits from price spread, arbitrage and volatility, rather than betting on price direction. Major holders and institutions might use temporary shorts or options collars around their assets, allowing them to lock in gains or control risk without having to sell their holdings. Honest Creators Share Their Hedge Mode Results – And It’s Not Pretty Some transparent creators on Binance Square have posted screenshots of their futures hedge positions, openly sharing their experiments with hedging. Time and again, these attempts ultimately lead to liquidation, showing that even experienced traders struggle to make hedge mode sustainable in the long run. Their transparency is a valuable lesson: hedge mode in futures isn’t a “safety net” for retail traders; it’s often a quick way to wipe out capital. If you’re starting out, focus on simple, one-way trades with clear risk management. A straightforward strategy will build a stronger foundation – without the complexity, costs, and risks that come with complicated hedges. $BTC $ETH $SOL