Entering a trade in the spot market depends on strategy, analysis, and current market conditions. Here are some recommendations for the right entry timing:

1. Support and resistance levels

• Support: a zone where the price often stops and bounces upwards. This is a good point for buying.

• Resistance: a zone where the price often stops and reverses downwards. Here, it is better to avoid buying.

When to enter?

• Buying on a bounce from the support level with confirming signals.

• Breakout of resistance level followed by a retest (price tests the resistance that has become support).

2. Using technical indicators

• SMA/EMA (moving averages): Buy when the short average (e.g., 50 EMA) crosses the long one from below (golden cross).

• RSI (Relative Strength Index): Enter at RSI value < 30 (oversold) and rise above this zone.

• MACD: Buy when the MACD line crosses the signal line from below.

3. Trend entry

Following the trend is one of the reliable ways to enter:

• Uptrend: enter on corrections when the price temporarily declines but remains above key supports.

• Downtrend: better to refrain from buying until a reversal.

Advice: The trend is your friend, do not try to catch the 'bottom' in a falling market without clear signals.

4. Breakout of important levels

When the price breaks through strong resistance with volume, this is a signal to enter a buy.

Confirmation:

• Volume on the breakout is increasing.

• The price holds above the broken level.

5. News background and fundamental analysis

• Positive news (e.g., reports, partnerships, or regulatory decisions) can be a catalyst for growth.

• Enter if you see market reaction to the news (price and volume increase).

6. Signs of trend reversal

• Divergence: the price is falling while indicators (e.g., RSI or MACD) show growth.

• Candlestick patterns:

• 'Hammer' or 'Engulfing' at key support.

• 'Doji' indicates uncertainty and a possible reversal.

7. Timeframes

Choose timeframes depending on your strategy:

• Long-term investments: daily and weekly charts.

• Swing trading: 4H or daily charts.

• Day trading: 5M, 15M, or 1H charts.

8. Risk management before entry

Before entering:

1. Determine the stop-loss level (where you will exit if the price goes against you).

2. Calculate potential profit/risk (the ratio should be at least 2:1).

Examples of entry signals:

1. The price approached support + RSI shows oversold + candlestick pattern 'Hammer'.

2. Breakout of resistance with high volume + retest of the level.

3. Golden cross on EMA (50 crosses 200 from below).

When NOT to enter a trade:

1. At peaks after a strong rise without correction.

2. During important news with unpredictable reactions.

3. When the market does not show clear signals and is in a range (sideways movement).

Thus, entering a trade requires market analysis and confirming signals. Trade only according to your strategy and avoid emotional decisions.