Someone always asks me: How should I read K-line charts? $ASTER clearly watches the market every day and studies the charts diligently, yet still gets dragged around by short-term fluctuations. Sometimes chasing in, sometimes rushing out, the more frequently you trade, the deeper your losses tend to be.



Actually, the core issue isn't the K-line itself, but that many people haven't understood the layered logic of cycle analysis.

I use a straightforward multi-cycle market analysis system in my daily trading. Three steps, each solving a core question—where is the trend, where is the position, and when is the right time to enter.

**Step 1: Look at the 4-hour chart to determine the main trend.** The 4-hour timeframe is enough to filter out short-term noise and interference, revealing the market's true attitude. Continuous higher highs and higher lows indicate a bullish trend; you can consider entering on a pullback to support. Continuous lower highs and lower lows suggest a bearish pattern; consider shorting during rebounds. If the price is moving sideways within a range, just watch patiently and avoid reckless moves. Going with the trend is the fundamental principle of making money.

**Step 2: Look at the 1-hour chart to identify entry points.** Once the main trend is clear, use the 1-hour chart to mark key support and resistance levels. Trendlines, moving averages, previous lows—these are critical areas to watch. When the price approaches these levels, opportunities may arise. Conversely, when the price hits previous highs or important resistance levels, consider reducing your position or taking profits. This step determines the price range where you'll act.

**Step 3: Look at the 15-minute chart to pinpoint the entry timing.** The 15-minute chart's task is simple—find the most precise entry point. After the price reaches the key levels marked on the 1-hour chart, observe for reversal signals, indicator divergences, or golden crosses. Pay special attention: a breakout must be accompanied by increased volume; otherwise, it could be a trap.

**The logic is quite simple: 4-hour for direction, 1-hour for position, 15-minute for timing.** If these cycles are conflicting or giving contradictory signals, don't force the trade—just stay in cash and wait. Shorter cycles change quickly, so set stop-losses properly to avoid being shaken out by repeated false moves and damaging your mindset and account.

Honestly, waiting for signals at key levels in line with the trend is far more reliable than blindly guessing market moves while staring at the screen. Trading is not about reaction speed; it's about patience and methodology.
ASTER-2,22%
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TokenTherapistvip
· 01-10 12:05
Sounds good, but the real challenge is execution—most people still can't control their impulses.
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LiquidityNinjavip
· 01-09 00:56
Once again, this multi-cycle theory sounds good in theory, but in practice, it's still just relying on luck...
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StablecoinArbitrageurvip
· 01-08 08:55
actually, the correlation breakdown between 4h and 1h confluence points is where most retail bleed out their capital. been running this exact framework through my backtesting engine... Sharpe ratio doesn't quite hold up past volatility regimes above 60%. curious if you've stress-tested against liquidation cascades on leverage.
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RugDocScientistvip
· 01-08 08:55
Ah, man, why can't I just fix my problem of frequent operations? I understand everything after watching, but I still get wrecked as soon as I start trading.
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FlashLoanPhantomvip
· 01-08 08:52
I agree with the 4-hour trend setting, but honestly, most people still can't hold on. As soon as it drops 2%, they panic.
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NotAFinancialAdvicevip
· 01-08 08:49
It's the same three-cycle theory again. It sounds good, but in practice, you're still getting washed out.
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HappyMinerUnclevip
· 01-08 08:36
Actually, it's about controlling your hand and not performing frequent operations all day long. That's the hardest part to achieve.
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