The market fell for three days in a row, and I said in advance last night that I would close the middle yang line today under pressure - the result was indeed verified.
Why can you judge so accurately? Let's not talk about this yet, let's talk about how to go next week. I'm still optimistic about next week overall.
There is a high probability that the gap will be filled, and there may be two routes in rhythm, but the result is similar: falling first and then rising is the main theme.
The key is to see if there is any blockbuster news this weekend. If there is a big positive news over the weekend, then Monday and Tuesday may directly make up the gap and will not continue to rush up. After the replenishment, it still has to be adjusted, and I estimate that it will not stop falling and rebound until the second half of the week.
What if the weekend news is unremarkable? That's another script: Monday may flush, but it won't fill the gap, and then it will start to fall. It bottomed out on December 9th, just in time for the Federal Reserve to announce its December interest rate cut decision on the 10th, and I think this node will be favorable.
After the market rises in the second half of the week, the gap will be filled in the process of rising.
Which of the two situations is more probable? I personally prefer the second type - Monday's increase should not be too strong, and it is more reasonable to leave the gap to be left in the second half of the week.
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LiquidityHunter
· 12-10 17:18
December 9th hitting the bottom is too precise a timing point, which makes me a bit wary... Such a standard liquidity gap replenishment logic has long been targeted by bots.
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HashRatePhilosopher
· 12-10 04:07
Hey, it's this old script that falls first and then rises
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bridgeOops
· 12-10 04:05
I feel that the probability of the second script is indeed greater, and the gap is to keep suspense
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Degen4Breakfast
· 12-10 03:52
Dude's prediction is fine, but I still want to bet on a big bomb on the weekend...
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DisillusiionOracle
· 12-10 03:47
Uh, here you go again? The weekend news is the big killer, don't tell me what gaps can't be filled
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BoredWatcher
· 12-10 03:46
The judgment that Monday is not strong is a bit amazing, in case the news suddenly explodes
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RugPullAlertBot
· 12-10 03:43
Well, this wave of predictions is indeed a bit ruthless, even the middle yang line is accurate, but I want to hear how the logic of making up for the gap in the second half of the week came about
The market fell for three days in a row, and I said in advance last night that I would close the middle yang line today under pressure - the result was indeed verified.
Why can you judge so accurately? Let's not talk about this yet, let's talk about how to go next week. I'm still optimistic about next week overall.
There is a high probability that the gap will be filled, and there may be two routes in rhythm, but the result is similar: falling first and then rising is the main theme.
The key is to see if there is any blockbuster news this weekend. If there is a big positive news over the weekend, then Monday and Tuesday may directly make up the gap and will not continue to rush up. After the replenishment, it still has to be adjusted, and I estimate that it will not stop falling and rebound until the second half of the week.
What if the weekend news is unremarkable? That's another script: Monday may flush, but it won't fill the gap, and then it will start to fall. It bottomed out on December 9th, just in time for the Federal Reserve to announce its December interest rate cut decision on the 10th, and I think this node will be favorable.
After the market rises in the second half of the week, the gap will be filled in the process of rising.
Which of the two situations is more probable? I personally prefer the second type - Monday's increase should not be too strong, and it is more reasonable to leave the gap to be left in the second half of the week.