Yesterday, I looked at the trends of Ethereum five hours in advance and hit it almost accurately. Friends who followed my operations all profited. This is not luck, but insight into market logic. Today’s chart seems to lack clear signals, but smart people know that opportunities lie in ambiguity— the market always gives you two directional choices, and the true winners are those who can find profit positions whether the market rises or falls.

The logic of virtual currencies is not complex. Why does the price rise? Because it has dropped to a stop-loss point for bulls, and bears think they have the upper hand, only to be countered. Why does it fall? Because it has risen to a stop-loss point for bears, bulls start to retreat, and bears take over to continue the pressure. Those who are always stopped out often do so because they have listened too much to so-called "resistance levels" and "support levels," placing their stop-losses at obvious positions like previous highs or lows, becoming the prey of the market.

About Stop-Losses

• Do not let your stop-loss point become the market's "sweet spot." Obvious "key levels" are easily "harvested" by the market. Try setting a slightly further stop-loss based on volatility or ATR indicators to increase your margin for error.

• Every stop-loss is a lesson; reviewing is essential. Your goal is to move from being passively "harvested" to actively finding the market's "pain points."

Key to Profiting

Smart people do not get caught up in whether the market will rise or fall; they are more concerned with where the weaknesses of both bulls and bears lie.

• Locate areas with dense stop-losses: market pain points are opportunity points.

• Use technical analysis indicators like Bollinger Bands, MACD, or candlestick patterns to confirm reversal signals.

• Dynamic layout: Try to enter the market when it hesitates, rather than following the majority in chasing highs and lows.

In the end, the market is actually a zero-sum game. The profits you lose will always be consumed by others. Those who consistently enter precisely do not only watch charts but also observe the flow of emotions, psychology, and funds. "Your stop-loss point is my entry point"—this statement is not boastful but a market truth. Stand on the opposite side of the majority to understand how large funds use false breakouts and false breakdowns to layout their strategy, and take control of your own rhythm.