Observing the opening trend this morning and reviewing the analysis from the past two days, it’s not hard to notice a phenomenon——despite continuous suppression from the financial sector and institutional expectations, market enthusiasm remains very resilient. This resilience is mainly reflected in one point: the price still staying above the 5-day moving average, and from a technical perspective, it’s not yet a true correction.
So the question is, how can we determine when this wave of oscillation will bottom out? My approach is straightforward: when the market enthusiasm persists despite financial suppression, and once the financial sector shifts to release positive signals (similar to the first trigger point), the turning point will arrive. Conversely, if the financial sector continues to cool down, the oscillation and correction will deepen, and the key level below becomes a reference.
Ultimately, the key level is just surface data; the real secret lies in the degree of coordination between the financial sector and market sentiment. When both move in the same direction, that’s the beginning of a reversal.
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RektButSmiling
· 01-11 01:12
Finance is really crucial, and the fact that the momentum has held above the 5-day moving average for five days shows that we haven't completely collapsed yet. Once positive signals appear, it'll be over.
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GasBankrupter
· 01-10 11:44
Financial markets tend to follow the trend with a single move; the logic sounds good, but it feels too idealistic... In reality, retail investors have already been cut once, who still believes in this now?
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LowCapGemHunter
· 01-08 07:59
A shift in the financial aspect is the real trigger; right now, it's all about watching the policy direction.
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ForkItAllDay
· 01-08 07:58
The key is the shift in the financial aspect; just looking at the levels isn't very useful.
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CommunityLurker
· 01-08 07:58
Basically, it's just about looking at the financial side's attitude. No matter how strong the popularity is, it can't withstand a single statement from big funds.
Alright, let's wait for the signal. Anyway, the 5-day moving average is still holding.
This is the toughest test of mentality—feeling like you're gambling on when the financial side will turn.
What’s the reference point for the level? The real secret is still those little things like popularity and funds.
Holding steady above the 5-day moving average doesn't mean there's nothing wrong; keep watching.
By the way, if the financial side loosens up this wave, the rebound could be really fierce...
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RugPullAlertBot
· 01-08 07:56
You're not wrong, but you still have to wait for the financial sector's attitude; no matter how popular it is, it's useless.
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DAOdreamer
· 01-08 07:55
If the financial side doesn't turn around in a day, we just have to keep playing along... Honestly, it's still about whether we can endure until that inflection point appears.
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GasDevourer
· 01-08 07:50
The shift in the financial aspect is the real turning point; we're still in the betting phase.
Observing the opening trend this morning and reviewing the analysis from the past two days, it’s not hard to notice a phenomenon——despite continuous suppression from the financial sector and institutional expectations, market enthusiasm remains very resilient. This resilience is mainly reflected in one point: the price still staying above the 5-day moving average, and from a technical perspective, it’s not yet a true correction.
So the question is, how can we determine when this wave of oscillation will bottom out? My approach is straightforward: when the market enthusiasm persists despite financial suppression, and once the financial sector shifts to release positive signals (similar to the first trigger point), the turning point will arrive. Conversely, if the financial sector continues to cool down, the oscillation and correction will deepen, and the key level below becomes a reference.
Ultimately, the key level is just surface data; the real secret lies in the degree of coordination between the financial sector and market sentiment. When both move in the same direction, that’s the beginning of a reversal.