Recently, a friend asked me why I keep getting caught at the high points, and I realized that many people are actually falling into the same trap—the bull trap.



To put it simply, a bull trap is the market fooling you. The price looks like it's about to break out higher, so you get excited and enter the market, only to see it reverse and fall back. Your stop-loss gets hit, and your account suffers losses. This situation is especially common in the crypto market because retail investors are particularly easy to be led by FOMO emotions.

I've observed this kind of movement many times. Big players are actually playing with retail traders' psychology—they know you're afraid of missing out, so they create a fake breakout. The price breaks through a key level, trading volume suddenly spikes, and beginners see this signal and can't help but follow the trend and buy in. Then what happens? After a few candles, the price reverses downward directly. Those who entered at the high points are either forced to cut losses or get trapped, questioning their life choices.

How to identify and avoid this bull trap? My experience is that a breakout itself is not a buy signal. A genuine breakout should be accompanied by stable prices above resistance levels and increased trading volume. A rise without volume is almost certainly a trap. I’ve developed a habit: when I see a breakout, I don’t rush to act immediately. I wait for a few candles to see if the price can hold steady.

Another tip is to watch technical indicators. When RSI is overbought, be cautious. When the stochastic indicator signals a reversal, be even more careful. MACD can also help you see whether the momentum is truly changing or if it’s just a fleeting moment. Sometimes, what looks like a bull trap on a 15-minute chart is just a resistance test in a bear market on a 4-hour chart.

Ultimately, I think there are three core points to avoid falling into these traps. First, always set a stop-loss, especially when trading breakouts. Second, don’t let emotions drive your decisions—markets love to punish impatient traders. Third, cultivate patience and discipline; these are the real weapons for surviving long in this market. Many people lose money because they can’t hold their nerves, always rushing to catch quick gains, only to be harvested by the bull trap.
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