In trading markets, I’ve found that the easiest trap to fall into is what’s called a bull trap — when the price looks like it’s about to break out, but then suddenly reverses and crashes down, crushing a bunch of long positions alive.



Why does this happen so often? Essentially, it’s the big players playing psychological warfare. They know retail traders are afraid of missing out, especially when FOMO kicks in, and their judgment gets clouded. So, the big players create a false breakout, pushing the price through a resistance level to attract a bunch of people to go long — then immediately reverse and dump. Those who chase the high and enter at the top get their stop-loss triggered and get liquidated instantly.

I’ve seen quite a few of these tricks myself. Usually, it goes like this: the price keeps falling, then suddenly surges upward strongly, breaking through the previous resistance. Beginners see the candlesticks moving up, don’t think much, and start buying aggressively. After a few candles, the price makes a 180-degree turn, and everyone who entered at the high ends up losing money.

How can you avoid getting caught in a bull trap? My experience is this:

First, breaking through resistance isn’t a buy signal by itself. A genuine breakout must be confirmed — look for the price to stay above the resistance level steadily, supported by several candles, and volume should also increase. A rise on low volume? That’s a sign of a trap, and I usually ignore it.

Second, pay attention to volume. An upward move with strong volume is real strength; a rise without volume is basically a show. When I trade, if volume doesn’t support the move, I won’t enter even if I’m optimistic.

Technical indicators can also help. Be cautious when RSI is overbought, watch for reversal signals from stochastic indicators, and keep an eye on MACD momentum changes. These tools aren’t foolproof, but they add an extra layer of defense.

Another key point — look at higher timeframes. Many bull traps appear as breakouts on 15-minute or 30-minute charts, but when you switch to 4-hour or daily charts, it’s just a resistance test within a bear trend, not a real breakout.

Finally, always set stop-losses, especially when trading breakouts. Don’t let emotions drive your decisions — the market loves punishing impatient traders. Patience and discipline are your strongest weapons in trading.
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