A friend recently shared his trading results: in half a year, turning 10,000 USDT into 140,000 USDT in profits. He said there’s no secret trick, just treating trading as a craft to study diligently—watching the charts daily, analyzing K-line structures, and pondering the intentions of the main players. Today, I want to share his six practical insights. Truly understanding one of them can significantly improve your risk management in the crypto space.



**Washout Patterns Are Detectable**

Prices surge rapidly but retrace slowly? That’s a typical washout rhythm. During this phase, the main players aim to scare out retail investors’ chips. The real top is a different story—usually, it involves a volume spike pushing prices higher followed by an instant crash, leaving no time for reaction. These two movements are very different; recognizing them helps avoid getting cut once again.

**Avoid the Weak Rebound After a Sharp Drop**

A terrifying decline followed by a feeble rebound indicates capital is fleeing. Rebounds that climb step-by-step are especially confusing—your brain unconsciously thinks, “It dropped so hard, it should reverse soon,” but this logic is wrong nine times out of ten. The main players won’t give retail investors a chance to turn the tide during distribution.

**The Secret of Top Volume**

High volume at a top doesn’t necessarily mean the peak. It indicates that bulls and bears are still fighting, and there’s potential for further pushing higher. The real danger signal is a sudden disappearance of volume—this usually means the main players have withdrawn, and a slow decline is likely to follow.

**Distinguishing True from Fake Bottom Volume**

Excited by a single-day surge in volume? Stay calm. A one-off large transaction could be a trap to lure more buyers. The key is whether volume can be sustained afterward. If volume continues to rise over time, that’s a genuine sign of accumulation. Don’t be fooled by a single day’s market movement.

**Volume as the Market’s Thermometer**

K-line charts show the trading outcome, but volume is the real driving force behind it. Light trading indicates a lack of market heat; high volume shows genuine capital action. Habitually monitoring volume changes allows you to detect market turning points earlier than others.

**The Highest Realm: Wu Wei (Non-Action)**

Know when to rest and when to act decisively. Don’t blindly chase rallies, panic-sell during dips, or recklessly tinker with your account. Everyone understands this in theory, but few can truly do it. This is the most difficult discipline in trading.

Opportunities in the crypto space are always present, but most people lack patience and a clear mind. Your skills might be fine, but the key is whether you can maintain judgment amid market fluctuations. Follow the right rhythm, avoid reckless moves, and time will gradually reveal the true face of this market. $ETH $BNB $SOL
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NoStopLossNutvip
· 5h ago
Honestly, a 140,000 profit sounds great, but I still think luck plays a big role... I really feel the weakness in the rebound; I’ve been fooled every time. The analysis of trading volume makes sense, but in practice, it's really hard to tell whether it's a trap or a genuine signal. Letting things take their course? Haha, that's the hardest... I can't do it. Running away during a single-day surge after a big volume spike—I've learned that lesson after losing several times. Everything said is correct, but the real challenge is whether you can actually follow through. Most people still tend to operate chaotically.
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ZKProofstervip
· 01-08 15:51
nah the 10x story always conveniently skips over the losses tbh... volume analysis is legit tho, that part checks out
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GasFeeWhisperervip
· 01-06 17:54
Half a year 1 to 14? I think this guy didn't even mention using leverage... Is it true? Without leverage, you'd need a very steady hand to go on such a rampage. The trading volume is okay, but most people can't tell whether the rebound is a trap to shake out weak hands or a genuine reversal. I'm most afraid of those soft rebounds; every time I think "it should go up," but then it suddenly crashes back. I’ve always had trouble distinguishing between a shakeout and a distribution; they seem pretty similar. The last phrase "governing by non-action" is the real killer move, but I really can't do it. I’d have to cut my losses five times before I learn. A 140,000 profit sounds great, but I’ve asked many people how many have lost their principal in half a year...
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SmartMoneyWalletvip
· 01-06 17:49
10,000 USDT turns into 140,000? Wake up, this is a textbook case of survivor bias. How many accounts went directly to zero behind that 140% profit you see? Disappearing volume = main players retreating? Wrong. On-chain data shows the exact opposite—big players are quietly accumulating. You’re still watching the K-line. The rhythm of shakeouts actually depends on the distribution of chips. Retail investors can never see the full picture; the movements of whales are the real answer. Unfortunately, most people lack the on-chain tracking ability. Moving step by step upward is just a trap for stop-loss hunting. I focus on the microstructure of capital flow; the behavior of certain whale wallets has long revealed their hand. Excited by single-day volume spikes? I only care about changes in depth order books—that’s how you can see the true intentions of the big players. Surface data is all a smokescreen. In short, without a quantitative analysis framework, constantly watching the charts will only get you liquidated—that’s the fate of retail investors.
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HodlOrRegretvip
· 01-06 17:48
10,000 in half a year becomes 140,000? Honestly, it's still a mindset issue. I just can't hold on; I want to sell at every rebound. --- This guy is right. When there's no strength in the rebound, you really need to hide. I've been trapped too many times to understand. --- Volume can be the cruelest deceiver. A single-day surge in volume is just a trap for诱多, I've fallen for it. --- Is the volume still increasing at the top? I often get this wrong, it's frustrating. --- The idea of ruling by doing nothing sounds easy, but very few actually do it. I'm still too greedy. --- The key is patience, but I just don't have that talent. --- Staring at the chart for too long makes my mind cloudy. I just cut my losses again this time.
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SerumSqueezervip
· 01-06 17:46
Six months to turn 10,000 into 140,000? This guy must be using leverage, or is he really that good at reading the market... Forget it, I should just honestly watch the volume. --- I deeply understand the feeling of a weak rebound; last time I was tricked into a soft rebound and ended up as the bag holder. --- It sounds nice, but when the market really comes, isn't it just trembling... Saying "go with the flow" is easier said than done. --- Volume doesn't lie, but I always get it wrong haha, maybe my eyesight isn't that good. --- Wait, he made 140,000 just from these 6 points? So what's been causing my losses over the past two months... --- The last one hits the hardest. I know I should be restrained, but I just can't change this bad habit. --- Shakeout with a slow correction vs. a sudden crash at the top, the difference is indeed huge, it takes several cycles to really understand. --- The volume trap really caught me once; a single-day surge in volume, I chased in, and the result... Forget it, I won't mention it.
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