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Recently, I was reviewing my trades and started thinking about something we all face in crypto: what exactly is ATH and how to handle it without losing your mind?
Okay, ATH stands for All Time High, the highest price an asset has ever reached in its history. It sounds simple, but that's where most people make mistakes. When you see something hit an ATH, the market is literally at its most exciting and dangerous point at the same time.
The thing is, when a crypto hits an ATH, there isn’t much supply available. The bullish side is strong, people are euphoric, and that’s when many traders lose objectivity. They buy at the peak without thinking twice. I’ve been there, believe me.
So, what is ATH from a practical perspective? It’s that moment when you need to apply real tools, not intuition. Fibonacci, moving averages, serious technical analysis. When the price is near ATH, most ignore this and just follow the hype.
One strategy that works for me is measuring the price momentum. Imagine the market as a spring: to reach new highs, it needs prior corrections that generate energy. If you don’t see that, it’s a red flag.
Fibonacci is your friend here. The levels 23.6%, 38.2%, 50%, 61.8%, 78.6% act as support and resistance. When something hits an ATH, I use Fibonacci extensions (1.270, 1.618, 2.000, 2.618) to see where it might go next. The moving average also tells you if you’re in an uptrend or downtrend.
Now, when it finally hits an ATH, the price usually goes through a testing phase. It can last weeks, months even. That’s where inexperienced traders get scared and sell at a loss. Price breakouts have three stages: action (breaks resistance), reaction (pressure weakens, test fall ), and resolution ( trend is confirmed or fails).
Regarding what to do when your position is at ATH, it depends on your plan. If you’re long-term and believe in the project, you can hold everything. But most of us do the logical thing: sell part of the position. Some sell everything if Fibonacci aligns with the ATH, indicating the trend might be ending.
The key is not to let emotion control you. Set take-profit levels before ATH arrives. Increase positions only when risk/reward makes sense. And always, always respect the support levels of the moving average.
I’ve seen people lose fortunes buying at ATH without a plan. I’ve seen others multiply gains because they had discipline. The difference is truly understanding what ATH is, not just the concept, but how the market behaves at that point.
Has anyone else gone through this? I’d be curious to know how you handle these situations. At Gate, I have some of my assets monitored precisely for these moments.