#美国消费者物价指数发布在即 Water flows to the low places, but opportunities often appear in the opposite direction.



The operation on January 13 was quite straightforward—northbound funds started to position, and the market soared accordingly. Bitcoin sharply gained over 8,000 points, and Ethereum followed with a 400-point swing. This kind of linkage is not a coincidence but a true reflection of market resonance.

Once the market accelerates, the rhythm becomes deadly. Those who positioned early indeed reaped this wave of benefits, but what is the deeper logic?

I summarize it in one sentence— the more volatile the fluctuations, the more obvious the profit window.

Real opportunities don’t knock on the door proactively; they often hide in moments that make people feel the most uneasy. Price swings and emotional turbulence are precisely the best times for savvy traders to act. Just look at the performance of $BTC, $ETH, and $BNB—profits are hidden within the turbulence.

The lesson from this round of market is simple: go with the trend, and don’t overthink the details.
BTC1,85%
ETH1,81%
BNB0,82%
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NFTRegrettervip
· 7h ago
Here we go again with this set? Every time they say go with the trend, and what’s the result? Retail investors are still the bagholders.
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ChainMelonWatchervip
· 7h ago
It's the same old story, first know the result then analyze the logic. I’m familiar with this feeling. They haven't even released the CPI yet and they're already telling stories. When the market reverses and breaks through, don’t cry. An 8000-point increase? How do those who bought in feel now? Haha. Big volatility = profit opportunity? Anyone can say that, but the key is how to survive until the next wave. Going with the trend sounds easy, but by the time you react, it’s already too late and you've been cut out. Opportunities hide in moments of uncertainty. So why does no one dare to buy the dip during panic sell-offs? That’s correct but useless, just like understanding the market charts but still losing money.
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fren.ethvip
· 7h ago
Again and again, this kind of rhetoric—it's always the insider who plans ahead, right?
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NotFinancialAdvicevip
· 8h ago
Here comes the same old "volatility is an opportunity" rhetoric. Fine, I believe it, but how many actually dare to buy at high levels? It's easy to say, but executing it is all blood. Is the northbound capital allocation just following? Can we stop always thinking about catching the bottom? Just want to ask, how many people really made money during the January 13 wave, or did they get trapped again? Volatility can indeed make money, but the prerequisite is that you survive and walk out alive. Going with the trend is correct, but I'm just worried that following the trend might lead you straight into it. The CPI hasn't been released yet, isn't it a bit early to say these things? This article sounds like it's justifying all the losses. Why do I feel like it's a post-hoc rationalization?
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