Breaking through $65,000 after missing out, can you still get in now?



On June 15th, BTC broke through $65,000. If you didn't position yourself in advance, you're probably experiencing the pain of missing out: seeing the news but hesitating and missing the rally. The current question is: can you still get in?

My answer is: yes, but you must first do three things.

First, let go of the mindset of "perfect entry points." No one can buy at the exact bottom or sell at the top. What's important is your trading plan and position management, not "whether it's the lowest price."

Second, clarify your trading cycle. If you're a short-term trader, the risk-reward ratio of chasing gains above $65,000 isn't ideal—$67,000–$68,000 is a strong resistance zone, and support is around $63,500–$64,500. If you're a medium- to long-term investor on weekly or even monthly charts, $65,000 is still a relatively reasonable range. Any new developments regarding sanctions or nuclear issues within the 60-day negotiation period could trigger a re-pricing of the market.

Third, replace all-in with phased position building. I recommend adopting the "pyramid building method": buy 10% as an initial position at $64,500–$65,000 for observation; if it pulls back to $62,000–$63,000, add 15%; if confirmed support around $60,000, add another 20%. Set a stop-loss below $58,000.

The most dangerous move is to impulsively open high-leverage contracts after missing out, in an attempt to "make up for it." The market won't pull back just because you missed the entry, nor will it rise immediately because you go long. Experience shows that missing out doesn't cost money; rushing to add large positions does.

After the official signing on June 19th, whether the agreement can be detailed with more substantive content will be answered in the 60-day negotiation period. Consider each entry as a "trial and error" rather than a gamble. The crypto market never closes, and opportunities are always there.

#比特币反弹
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