The four stages are the excretion stage.


The early smart money and institutional funds will start distributing chips or begin shorting, which leads to a price decline.
There are four types of cliff dives in this stage, which is near the needle point after a frantic rally; this area can be shorted, but like in stage one, it’s hard to grasp.
The five types of dip buy stages are where it’s easier for us to make money.
An asset that has risen by 35-50% can easily give us a quick 5% or more gain after a cliff-like drop and subsequent rebound.
Those who want to short can look at the six types of dead pump bounce.
After experiencing a cliff-like plunge and rebound, shorting becomes easier, but large profits are harder to achieve, and the range of volatility will gradually decrease.
The seventh type is the long kiss goodnight.
It means that these low-priced assets are all trash; after completing this cycle, volatility will start to disappear, and the main players will take their profits and leave.
Any further moves might only happen months or years later, so those in this category should definitely not participate.
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