Scalping? You don't need to understand any trend theory, let alone bother drawing a bunch of lines. All those so-called fundamental analyses—forget about them. Where will the market go in the next second? Nobody knows for sure. Since you can't predict the future, just focus on the present moment.
My method is extremely simple: forget about flashy indicators like MACD, Bollinger Bands, or Fibonacci retracements. Just watch two things—candlestick patterns and changes in trading volume.
When looking at minute-level trends, if you see this signal: a sudden inverted pin bar appears above, then turns into a bearish candle; at the same time, trading volume below clearly spikes, much higher than the previous few candles. What to do? Go short immediately.
How to set a stop loss? Place it right at the highest point of that pin bar. Take profit? Cash out after one or two minutes if things look good—don’t be greedy.
Take $pippin for example, this strategy has worked time and time again. Simple, but effective.
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TokenTaxonomist
· 4h ago
nah, statistically speaking this is just noise trading dressed up as "method"—let me pull up my spreadsheet real quick but honestly the data suggests otherwise on those micro timeframes
Reply0
PotentialWhale
· 12-04 10:20
Nothing matters in front of altcoins; their price movements are completely unpredictable.
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HodlKumamon
· 12-04 09:21
Inverted pin + increased volume, so just short directly? Bear did some calculations on the win rate of this strategy recently... Well, let the data speak, but don't go all in, everyone.
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blocksnark
· 12-04 09:19
That's right, but most people will probably still go back to drawing lines after reading this... The combo of a fake breakout wick plus a volume spike is definitely deadly, but the key is still mentality—a couple seconds of greed and you'll lose big.
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SneakyFlashloan
· 12-04 09:17
Inverted pin + volume spike means to go short? I’ve played this setup too. The key is mindset—it's easy to get greedy.
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SerLiquidated
· 12-04 09:12
It sounds pretty straightforward, but can this thing really be stable? I always feel like with orders that close in just a minute or two, the costs and slippage could eat up half the profits.
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FOMOmonster
· 12-04 09:08
This logic basically comes down to betting on the right direction. So if there’s a false breakout with a volume spike, you just go short? It feels like you’re just using probability to make money—can you really get anything meaningful out of profits made in just one or two minutes?
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DaoGovernanceOfficer
· 12-04 09:07
nah this is just surface-level pattern matching tbh... empirically speaking, scalping on volume spikes alone is basically gambling with extra steps. the data suggests 90% of retail traders blowing accounts do exactly this lmao
Reply0
PleaseDoNotDoThis.
· 12-04 08:59
Attach a picture!
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PleaseDoNotDoThis.
· 12-04 08:59
If this signal appears: a sudden inverted pin bar appears above, followed by a bearish candlestick; at the same time, the trading volume below increases significantly, much higher than the previous few candlesticks. What should you do in this situation? Open a short position directly.
#美联储重启降息步伐 [One-Minute Practical Strategy]
Trading can actually be very straightforward.
Scalping? You don't need to understand any trend theory, let alone bother drawing a bunch of lines. All those so-called fundamental analyses—forget about them. Where will the market go in the next second? Nobody knows for sure. Since you can't predict the future, just focus on the present moment.
My method is extremely simple: forget about flashy indicators like MACD, Bollinger Bands, or Fibonacci retracements. Just watch two things—candlestick patterns and changes in trading volume.
When looking at minute-level trends, if you see this signal: a sudden inverted pin bar appears above, then turns into a bearish candle; at the same time, trading volume below clearly spikes, much higher than the previous few candles. What to do? Go short immediately.
How to set a stop loss? Place it right at the highest point of that pin bar. Take profit? Cash out after one or two minutes if things look good—don’t be greedy.
Take $pippin for example, this strategy has worked time and time again. Simple, but effective.