There are surprises in the primary/secondary markets.

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Familiar people in the crypto circle all know that Bitcoin's weekend market behavior is always highly unique. On the exchange, institutional trading sharply decreases, overall liquidity contracts significantly, and the market is very easy to be manipulated by short-term funds. Sudden spikes and rapid drops without warning have long become the norm. Without a prudent risk management mindset, it’s easy to be passively caught or stop-lossed during rest days.

Let's discuss three core issues traders care most about, aligned with the current Bitcoin volatility pattern, and talk about practical strategies and mental state management.

First, under the disorderly oscillation on weekends, how do I define my core defensive position?
Compared to the tight short-term battles on weekdays, I deliberately reduce my short-term trading desire on weekends, prioritizing defense as the core logic. I don’t obsess over minor short-term supports, only locking in key medium-term ranges on the chart as the boundary between strength and weakness. Based on the current market structure, the lower boundary of the short-term box is the most important defensive bottom line, and also the critical dividing line for whether the bullish trend can continue. Once this area is effectively broken downward, it indicates that the bearish forces have completely gained the upper hand during the weekend, and all short-term positions will be closed to avoid holding on to hopes of resisting; meanwhile, oscillations above the defensive position, whether back and forth, are seen as healthy shakeouts—no panic selling or reckless adding to positions.

At the same time, the futures side will tighten defenses in sync, naturally avoiding high-leverage trading on weekends, significantly reducing position multiples, and expanding the tolerance for stop-losses. In an environment with insufficient liquidity, narrow stop-losses are effectively like giving the market chips through spikes; a loose and reasonable defensive boundary is the core confidence for weekend holdings.

Second, I want to share a long-term tested practical tip specifically used to avoid weekend crashes and malicious spikes.
Most deadly spikes and deep sell-offs during weekends happen in the late-night hours when liquidity is at its worst. My habit is very simple and straightforward: strictly control trading desires during weekend nights, reduce positions and leverage in advance. As night approaches, clear all short-term floating positions, only keep the spot holdings and very low leverage defensive orders, and remove all close-range orders and tight stop-losses.

Many losses are not due to wrong judgment but because of staying up late watching the market, emotional trading, and opening positions impulsively, influenced by short-term spike market action. Proactively abandoning low-efficiency night trading and refusing to operate frequently during liquidity vacuum periods can directly avoid 80% of sudden weekend sell-offs and spike liquidations, protecting the account at low cost. This is far more important than chasing small weekend profits.

Third, when Bitcoin is in a long-term sideways consolidation with stagnation in gains and losses, how to relieve holding anxiety without frequent trading?
Sideways markets are the most mentally exhausting. The indecisive movement always makes people want to trade frequently and switch positions repeatedly, trying to catch every small wave, but in the end, it often results in missed opportunities and repeated losses. Facing this situation, I have long given up the habit of watching the market all day.

Reduce the frequency of market updates, block out all fragmented market noise and extreme bullish or bearish comments that set the rhythm, and avoid being carried away by short-term emotions. Hold the spot holdings with a laid-back attitude, give up the obsession with frequent short-term T+ trades, and detach attention from the ups and downs. The sideways consolidation itself is a phase of accumulation; in markets without a clear direction, staying on the sidelines and waiting lightly are the best strategies.
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