This most exciting part isn’t the drop itself, but the fake breakout that happened just before it—many people got lured in, and then $CGPT was smashed straight out of its high-level area.



My short entry was at 0.03778. What really caught my attention was that after that spike up, volume didn’t continue—instead, it quickly returned below the key zone. That spot is crucial: once it swept out a batch of late longs, the order book suddenly felt lighter. When the shorts pressed down, everything below followed.

Now the price has reached 0.01886, with a return of +2412.99%. The room for volatility is clearly opened up. Put simply, in this kind of market it’s not about who can shout the loudest—it’s about who can nail the timing between panic and baiting longs. Most people at the time still thought it was just a shakeout, but the structure had already been broken.

I don’t want to be too greedy with this trade. Splitting it 80/20 feels better: take the majority profit first, and keep a smaller position with a protection level to continue observing the extension.

If you have profit, respect the profit first—don’t hand control back. If you missed it, don’t chase. And don’t chase low with overconfidence—wait for the next, steadier opportunity.

$BTC $ETH
CGPT0.11%
BTC-0.31%
ETH2.24%
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