1. In a bull market, the more popular a currency is, the faster and more miserably it will fall.
2. No one in the market will publicize or shout about coins with real potential, such as 100-fold coins. Instead, only a handful of people will occasionally briefly mention them in the early stages (traffic is small).
3. Market value, number of listed exchanges, number of holders, and investment institutions are not the only references for selecting a currency.
4. The market always changes in a gentle curve.
5. There is always someone who wants to see the market.
6. The altcoin pull-up method is the same, and the pull-up time is longer.
7. Don’t touch the new currency that first skyrockets and then halves.
8. Similarly, there will always be those who chase the rise.
9. If you buy, it will fall, if you sell, it will rise. Just like social rules and systems, you cannot change them.
10. When buying, the currency does not fall but rises. After making a profit of 5%-20%, it suddenly begins to fall, indicating that the currency has begun to harvest leeks.
11. The most violent rebound is definitely not the potential currency.
12. In the bull market, bet on a rebound and choose the current hot currency with a large increase.
13. If you hold the opposite direction to the majority of people's opinions, you can often get out of the independent market.
14. In the bull market, those coins that follow the rise and fall of Bitcoin, and the rise and fall are dramatic, must be the coins with the greatest potential in this bull market.
15. In the bull market, some potential coins perform mediocrely in the first half of the bull market, but will start to rise 20 times in the second half of the bull market.
16. In a bull market, if a currency can trade sideways for several months after a 10-fold increase, it must be a potential currency.
17. In the bull market, if the price can trade sideways for several months after an increase of less than 10 times, it must be a monster coin. And it must be 100 times the rise and fall.
Disclaimer: Includes third-party opinions. No financial advice. May include sponsored content.See T&Cs.