$BR You were cutting into the meat at 0.15, now it's 0.2080, with a 24-hour trading volume of $209 million. I need to wake up you gamblers who only chase rises and sell declines.


The greed index today reports 82, definitely in the extreme greed zone, jumping 18 points from last week's 64. The funding rate is even more outrageous, with long positions' costs soaring to over 180% annualized. According to the latest exchange data, the perpetual contract long-short ratio is 2.8:1, all bubbles built on leverage. The last time things got this extreme was when $BR was at 0.12, when the funding rate dipped below -0.2%, causing panic across the entire network. And what happened? It surged 80% in three days.
History doesn't simply repeat itself, but human nature always stays the same. Now, $BR has risen from 0.1504 to 0.2150, encountering resistance and pulling back, with a volatility of over 40%. The surge in trading volume indicates active turnover, but the emotional data is giving early warning—more and more people are chasing the high, and the corpses of short squeezes haven't cooled down yet. Entering the market now isn't necessarily wrong, but you need to learn to trade with a gun to your head.
If it retraces to the 0.1950-0.2000 range, you can lightly open 1-2% positions, with stop-loss below 0.1850, and take profit at 0.22-0.23. Do not heavily bet at 0.2080—that's not trading, that's giving away money. Remember, now is not the time for greed; it's the time for fear to return—emotional turning points = the best entry point.
I am that crazy trader who bought at 0.15 and reduced positions at 0.2050, watching the funding rate reversal and spot premium closely, waiting for you to be awakened by margin call texts. Follow me, I will tell you in advance where the next cut will be.
BR15.84%
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