#以太坊大户持仓变化 【Mid-length Article: Sniper's High-Probability Hunting Grounds · Two Verified Opportunity Pools in 2025】🎯



With a risk bottom line as insurance, the next question becomes simple—where is the easiest place to make money?

Don’t do everything. Precision is more valuable than broad spreading. In 2025, these two repeatedly verified high-success-rate directions are worth sticking to:

**1. New Coin Launch Gold Rush**
The iron rule for choosing coins: only focus on the top-tier platform’s initial offerings of the first few projects. These targets are backed by platform credibility, automatically garner market attention, and ensure liquidity.

When to pull the trigger? When the trading volume on the first day surpasses a 200% turnover threshold, indicating the market has fully exchanged positions, and the time for new retail investors to enter has arrived. Deploy in batches, don’t go all in at once.

The most painful lesson: seeing a depegged coin and wanting to buy the dip? Forget it. Remember the NOT coin incident in June 2024? It surged fivefold on the first day, and those who stuck to trading discipline made profits. Those who thought it was a breakout and added leverage to buy the dip? They’re still stuck in the deep hole.

**2. The Head Token’s Pullback Trap (Also an Opportunity)**
When to act? $BTC $ETH When top-tier tokens fall from recent highs, and the decline reaches ≥15%, that’s a signal—market sentiment is overextended, and smart money should be entering.

How to enter? Don’t be greedy. Build positions in batches, controlling risk exposure. If you want to add leverage, lock it below 2x, with an absolute maximum of 3x. More leverage only accelerates liquidation.

The most critical point: if the price breaks below previous support levels, don’t ask why—stop loss immediately. The only difference between a master who cuts losses and one who gets wiped out is knowing when to let go.

💎 **The core logic is actually one sentence:**
Only in the most liquid star projects, patiently wait for market sentiment to reach extremes and give unreasonable prices. Don’t guess where the top is, don’t bet on the bottom—focus on small reversals within the trend.

This is what the longest-standing traders are doing.
ETH0,65%
NOT-6,37%
BTC0,61%
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0xDreamChaservip
· 01-09 00:03
The idea of deploying in batches is something I've heard countless times; the key is still mindset. One big liquidation and everything is wasted.

I was also caught in that NOT coin wave. Looking at these kinds of articles now still feels a bit uncomfortable.

Waiting for a 15% pullback in the leading coin before entering? It depends on market sentiment. It doesn't seem that simple.

No matter how well you explain, it can't compare to a black swan event. The true scarcity is in the execution of stop-loss.

It's true but hard to do, and that's the difference between retail investors and professionals.

Stop-loss is really the hardest. Every time I think about waiting a bit longer, and then it's gone.

Coins with high liquidity are indeed more reliable, but the premise is having enough capital to withstand the volatility.
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SerLiquidatedvip
· 01-08 22:44
Ah, it's the same old story again—building positions in batches, stop-loss, maintaining discipline... It sounds easy when you say it, but when you're actually facing a margin call, who the hell still remembers that?

That wave indeed taught a harsh lesson, but how many people can truly avoid greed now? I think most of them still have to learn the hard way through losing money.
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CoinBasedThinkingvip
· 01-08 18:40
Entering in batches sounds good in theory, but the key is that most people simply can't hold on...

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The NOT coin wave was a real-life lesson; some people still can't remember it.

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That's true, but the most liquid assets are often the most competitive. Can retail investors really seize the opportunity?

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The 15% level sounds simple, but in practice, it's easy to chase the high...

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Leverage of 3x? I think most people get wiped out at 2x.

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The 200% turnover on the first day of a new coin does have some tricks, but the risks are hidden inside.

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So ultimately, it's a discipline issue; technical skills are secondary.

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It's good to emphasize holding stops during a leader's pullback, but unfortunately, few people follow through.

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A precise strategy sounds good, but everyone wants to go all-in, everyone wants to take a gamble.
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LiquidatedDreamsvip
· 01-07 14:33
Alright, it's the same old story of phased accumulation and stop-loss discipline, but the NOT coin example really hit home. Watching FOMO when it was up 5 times was truly intense.

I've learned how to launch new coins, but I haven't learned to resist going all-in in that moment.

Buying in when the leader pulls back 15%? I feel like I always step in when it's around 23%.

I agree with the phrase "double leverage locked in," but anything above 3x is just gambling on fate.
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PretendingSeriousvip
· 01-07 14:30
You're right, but I'm just afraid that even after knowing, I still can't control my hands. My wave of NOT coin last year was when I used leverage to add to my position, and I'm still recovering.

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Precise targeting indeed has a higher probability of making money than blindly guessing, but execution is too difficult.

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I remember the 15% level, but the problem is that I always feel it will fall further when it drops, and I regret it once it rebounds.

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Leverage is truly a double-edged sword. I try to keep it below 3x, but when I get excited, I start at 5x.

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The most liquid assets are indeed more stable, but high returns from small coins are often backed by high risks and pitfalls.

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The example of NOT coin was too painful; so many people got trapped just like that.

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I agree with building positions gradually, but I don't have the patience to do it batch by batch.

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Stop-loss is easy to talk about but really hard to do; it can be life-threatening. I always want to wait a bit longer.
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ProofOfNothingvip
· 01-07 14:28
Exactly, the initial wave of new coin launches is indeed easy to profit from, but discipline is a must. The NOT coin incident should serve as a warning.

Leading coins only rebound 15% and then buy in? I feel like it still depends on technical analysis; just the decline isn't enough.

Building positions in batches is a good idea. A 3x leverage is really the limit; anything more is just gambling behavior.

Stop-loss is the hardest to execute. Most people only regret it after liquidation.

This logic seems simple, but the real test is in implementation. Do you want to share the pitfalls you've encountered this year?
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LayerZeroJunkievip
· 01-07 14:20
The idea of entering the market in batches has been heard countless times, but how many actually stick to it? The NOT coin wave is a vivid example of the opposite.
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