OTCMoonwalker

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The trend lines near MA200 are generally hard to connect; it's more stable to wait for a false breakout and pullback before shorting again.
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CryptoSat
💰 $MOVR – Exhaustion Spike, Short Opportunity ⚠️
🔽 SHORT
✳️ ENTRY : 2.85 - 3.05 - 3.20
🎯 TARGETS: 2.730, 2.625, 2.485, 2.270, 2.155, 2.040, 1.8
🀄️ LEVERAGE: 20x
🔴 STOPLOSS: 3.30
This is a classic vertical pump after long downtrend, often followed by sharp mean reversion 👀
Price has tapped near MA200 with a parabolic move, which usually signals short-term exhaustion rather than sustainable breakout.
The move lacks proper consolidation — meaning it's driven by liquidity grabs and FOMO entries, not strong structural support ⚖️
If price fails to hold above 2.8–3.0 zone, expect a quick drop towards 2.0 and below, filling inefficiencies left during the pump 💰
Best approach here — wait for weak candles/rejection near highs, then scale into shorts using DCA.
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I saw that ETH_USDT futures card. Are we talking about contracts in the group?
ETH0,87%
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ExtremeWayBit
$BTC $SOL $ETH Join the group in the picture below, participate in the red envelope 🧧 lottery! Or there is a way to join the group on the homepage, first come, first served! Just for entertainment 👌🏻
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For the past couple of days, I’ve been watching the stablecoin market charts. Honestly, there’s nothing new—just the same old issues: what people don’t believe in isn’t “1:1”; it’s whether, during a run, they can actually redeem the money. When it comes down to it, reserve transparency is basically just giving people psychological comfort—“I can get out in time.” Otherwise, the moment rumors start spreading in the group, the on-chain actions of splitting transactions into small amounts, and queuing by address to flee, show up immediately. Whales are even more obvious: they don’t make a fuss wh
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Lately I've been looking at a bunch of "whale/smart money" tags again, to be honest I only trust half of them now. Tags and clustering are quite useful, but they can also easily lead people astray: just because an address looks like a big holder doesn't mean it's a single person behind it. It could be an exchange's hot wallet, a market-making sub-account, or even the same person deliberately splitting into several layers to put on a show. Conversely, some truly large holders' rebalancing can be very "dirty," moving across chains, switching to new wallets in relay, and if you just label them wi
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