Many traders have studied triangles, but only remember the surface rules—breakout chasing longs, breakdown shorting. But such operations often get caught.
The true insight lies here: triangles are not meant to predict direction at all, but are a process of capital compression and a signal light of the main force's intentions. It is waiting—waiting for one side to become unable to hold, and the market to choose its stance.
**Symmetrical Triangle: Suspense**
Highs are descending, lows are ascending, and the price is squeezed into an increasingly narrow channel. Volume and volatility are both diminishing. What is the main force doing at this moment? Washing out stops, changing hands, testing market patience. Both bulls and bears are trapped; whoever breaks first loses.
**Ascending Triangle: Bullish Atmosphere**
Resistance levels are flat (selling pressure fixed), but the bottom support is getting higher each time (buying is becoming more active). What does this signal? Limited selling pressure, but increasing buying strength. Time favors the buyers. The principle is simple—since the selling pressure above isn't increasing, but the support below is adding, a breakout is not far off.
**Descending Triangle: Bearish Hint**
Support levels are flat (some are holding on stubbornly), but the rebound highs are getting lower each time (continuous supply above). The logic is: although someone is maintaining the bottom, selling pressure is increasing, and decreasing rebound heights prove buying power is weakening. Once support is broken, a rapid decline will follow.
**Expanding Triangle: Emotional Trap**
Highs are getting higher, lows are getting lower, and volatility is multiplying. This is not driven by underlying demand but by emotional swings. Bulls and bears are fighting chaotically, and the main force is harvesting volatility. Don't fight this kind of market.
**Three Phrases to Remember**
1. The closer to the end, the clearer the direction—final squeezing often leads to a breakout.
2. Breakouts depend on the pattern, not just a single candlestick—single candles have limited significance; the entire structure must be considered.
3. Confirming a pullback is more valuable than the initial breakout—many false breakouts will retrace, and the true direction is often confirmed on the second test.
**Core Logic**
Triangles are not gambling tools; they are windows to observe whether the main force has truly changed stance. All you need to do is one thing: don't rush to bet, wait until the market sorts out the chips, wait for the opponent to truly surrender. Entering at that moment has a higher success rate.
For assets like Bitcoin, this framework applies at any time cycle—daily, 4-hour, or even 15-minute charts, you can use this thinking to observe the main force's actions.
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GateUser-e19e9c10
· 16h ago
The retracement confirmation has indeed been exploited before. For now, just wait patiently for the second test before taking action.
View OriginalReply0
SchroedingerMiner
· 16h ago
Wake up, don't be fooled by false breakouts. The second test is the real entry point.
Many traders have studied triangles, but only remember the surface rules—breakout chasing longs, breakdown shorting. But such operations often get caught.
The true insight lies here: triangles are not meant to predict direction at all, but are a process of capital compression and a signal light of the main force's intentions. It is waiting—waiting for one side to become unable to hold, and the market to choose its stance.
**Symmetrical Triangle: Suspense**
Highs are descending, lows are ascending, and the price is squeezed into an increasingly narrow channel. Volume and volatility are both diminishing. What is the main force doing at this moment? Washing out stops, changing hands, testing market patience. Both bulls and bears are trapped; whoever breaks first loses.
**Ascending Triangle: Bullish Atmosphere**
Resistance levels are flat (selling pressure fixed), but the bottom support is getting higher each time (buying is becoming more active). What does this signal? Limited selling pressure, but increasing buying strength. Time favors the buyers. The principle is simple—since the selling pressure above isn't increasing, but the support below is adding, a breakout is not far off.
**Descending Triangle: Bearish Hint**
Support levels are flat (some are holding on stubbornly), but the rebound highs are getting lower each time (continuous supply above). The logic is: although someone is maintaining the bottom, selling pressure is increasing, and decreasing rebound heights prove buying power is weakening. Once support is broken, a rapid decline will follow.
**Expanding Triangle: Emotional Trap**
Highs are getting higher, lows are getting lower, and volatility is multiplying. This is not driven by underlying demand but by emotional swings. Bulls and bears are fighting chaotically, and the main force is harvesting volatility. Don't fight this kind of market.
**Three Phrases to Remember**
1. The closer to the end, the clearer the direction—final squeezing often leads to a breakout.
2. Breakouts depend on the pattern, not just a single candlestick—single candles have limited significance; the entire structure must be considered.
3. Confirming a pullback is more valuable than the initial breakout—many false breakouts will retrace, and the true direction is often confirmed on the second test.
**Core Logic**
Triangles are not gambling tools; they are windows to observe whether the main force has truly changed stance. All you need to do is one thing: don't rush to bet, wait until the market sorts out the chips, wait for the opponent to truly surrender. Entering at that moment has a higher success rate.
For assets like Bitcoin, this framework applies at any time cycle—daily, 4-hour, or even 15-minute charts, you can use this thinking to observe the main force's actions.