When the market gets hammered with those brutal red candles, it's often just setting up for the next leg up. Sharp selloffs tend to build pressure that eventually releases into solid green moves. That's how the cycles usually play out on the charts. The bigger the dump, the more conviction you typically see when buyers step back in.
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blockBoy
· 9h ago
Once it reaches a certain level of popularity, it should rebound. I've been tired of this pattern for years.
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SelfStaking
· 01-07 00:50
I've heard this kind of rhetoric too many times. Every time there's a sharp decline, it's said to be accumulation. So, what's the result?
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SmartContractDiver
· 01-07 00:50
The idea of buying more as the price drops has been around for years. Is it the same this time?
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StakeOrRegret
· 01-07 00:49
Damn it, here we go again. Every time it drops, they say it's accumulated strength, but it's been two months of falling and we're still waiting.
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MentalWealthHarvester
· 01-07 00:43
The deeply red and black candlesticks are often signals of a turnaround; I've heard this saying too many times.
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LiquidityNinja
· 01-07 00:40
Buy the dips, sell at the highs, that's my philosophy
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FlashLoanLord
· 01-07 00:29
Hey, I've heard this explanation too many times. Every time they say a crash is just accumulation, but what’s the result?
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RugpullAlertOfficer
· 01-07 00:25
It went up again and then dropped, so annoying. Is it true or not?
When the market gets hammered with those brutal red candles, it's often just setting up for the next leg up. Sharp selloffs tend to build pressure that eventually releases into solid green moves. That's how the cycles usually play out on the charts. The bigger the dump, the more conviction you typically see when buyers step back in.