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The drop shown in the chart above mainly has 3 reasons:
1. There is clear resistance above
That large red box in the upper right of the chart is, in essence, a resistance/supply zone.
Once the price moves up to there, it can’t rise further, so it’s easy to pull back.
You can understand it as:
Someone is selling above, and the buy-side order flow can’t push through, so it falls back.
2. After a short-term surge, profit-taking runs first
This is a 5-minute chart, and the fluctuations are fast.
After it has already climbed for a while, when it reaches a high level, short-term longs will first take profits, and that results in a retracement.
So this drop doesn’t necessarily mean the trend immediately flips bearish,
more like a “technical pullback after running into resistance”.
3. Below the long position, there are stop-loss levels, so the market is likely to go sweep them
This trade is a long position. The opening average price is about 73955.9,
and the stop-loss is roughly 73896.9.
In this kind of structure, the market really likes to probe downward first:
- Test support
- Sweep nearby stop-losses
- Liquidate leveraged long positions
So there’s another very common purpose behind the selloff:
Go hit that batch of stop-loss orders below.
One sentence summary:
It’s not “a drop for no reason,”
but “after the price rises into the resistance zone above, buying stalls; it pulls back technically first, and there’s also a possibility of sweeping the lower long stop-losses.”
In this chart, the most core point isn’t “why it drops,”
but:
When going long near a resistance zone, it’s inherently easy to get hit by a pullback.
The one thing beginners should remember most:
Chasing longs below resistance is the easiest way to get shaken out.#加密市场回升