
比特帝大币哥
比特帝大币哥
Founder of Coin Community, Vice President of Hong Kong Blockchain Technology Association, OKX Star Community, Ace Node. Bitget 2025 Trading Competition ranked first in Chinese.
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Entered the blockchain in 2016, now a 10-year veteran!
Experienced three rounds of bull and bear markets, starting from altcoins! Believes in BTC, loves Ethereum, deeply involved in quantitative relationship technology, on-chain level 2, with technical indicators being the Vegas channel and Fibonacci sequence filtering MACD and KDJ. Currently settled in New Zealand! Friends are welcome to gather! Let's contribute to the web3 cause together! $BTC $ETH $OKB $SOL $DOGE




Eight years ago, when assistant Qianqian put all her savings of 20,000 yuan into a crypto account, her hands were shaking.
Now, with 34 million lying there, she is calm.
These eight years have taught the assistant that something is more valuable than numbers.
In fund management, I never go all-in; I only move 20% each time.
Single loss is strictly capped at a 10% stop loss; after five consecutive mistakes, the maximum loss is half, but a trend wave can recover the losses. Many people die waiting for "just a little longer," I die by "must cut losses."
When it comes to trends, I never bottom-fish. #CryptoCurrentStatus
Guessing the bottom during a downtrend is like catching a flying knife; I only wait for the pullback after the trend is confirmed to buy.
Directions verified by the market naturally have a higher success rate.
I never touch meme coins; altcoins that multiply several times a day are all bait, pumped only to find someone to take over the position.
Better to miss out than to be cannon fodder.
MACD is the only indicator I watch.
Enter when the golden cross breaks above the zero line below zero; immediately reduce positions on a death cross above zero regardless of profit or loss.
No predictions, only follow. $AVAX
There are strict rules for adding positions: adding to losses amplifies mistakes; only add to profits to snowball.
A sudden surge in volume combined with a price breakout signals real money from the main force; following at this time can catch the main upward wave.
The last six words: follow the trend, control losses, be patient.
Hold when multi-period moving averages resonate upward; exit when they turn downward.
There is no holy grail, only discipline.
What has accumulated over eight years is not technique, but counter-human execution power. #CryptoGetRich

Bitcoin Latest Market Update on 5.26
Tug of war between bulls and bears, understand before jumping in!
Current BTC price around $77,500
Slight rebound of about +1% in 24 hours
But overall still in a high-level oscillation, weak rebound pattern
✅ Core conclusion first:
Now is not the time to chase highs!
Nor is it the time to blindly cut losses
Purely a range-bound grinding market
📊 Short-term key levels (remember directly)
🔻 Support: $75,000
If broken, will further test $74,000-$73,800
🔺 Resistance: $78,000-$78,500
Only a firm break above will open rebound space to $79,000-$82,000
⚠️ Current market reality
1. Off-exchange entry funds have clearly cooled down, buying power insufficient
2. Rebound lacks volume, belongs to weak recovery, not a reversal
3. Overall still in a correction phase since the beginning of the year, trend not reversed
💸 Advice for ordinary traders
- Light positions and observe, don’t heavily bet on direction
- Buy near support, reduce near resistance
- Strictly set stop-loss, refuse to stubbornly hold
The market is not short of opportunities, only patience
Don’t let short-term ups and downs break your mindset!
Stablecoins, on the surface, appear to be an innovation in payment tools, but essentially they are private sector reissues of "private money." #纽交所母公司授权OKX推出原油合约
Their advantages are clear: pegged to the US dollar, operating on blockchain, theoretically faster and cheaper than traditional banking systems, especially suitable for cross-border payments. Therefore, the scale of stablecoins has rapidly expanded over the past few years. Currently, the global stablecoin balance is about $300 billion, with Tether around $190 billion and Circle about $76 billion, no longer a niche market.
But the problem lies here. Stablecoins want to borrow the credit of the US dollar but do not fully operate within the traditional banking and central bank clearing systems. True currency has a core characteristic: "uniqueness"—1 dollar held by anyone, anywhere, at any time, and in any transaction should equal 1 dollar. Bank deposits, although also a form of money created by private institutions, are backed by central bank clearing, deposit insurance, and a lender of last resort, thus maintaining this uniqueness.
Stablecoins are different. They are issued by private institutions, rely on reserve assets to maintain the 1-dollar peg, and operate within a fragmented system composed of different chains, platforms, and issuers. Both Tether and USDC theoretically equal 1 dollar, but historically there have been deviations, though usually minor. The real concern for monetary systems is not small fluctuations during normal times but the collapse of confidence during times of stress.
The business model of stablecoin issuers naturally drives them to expand scale, increase returns, and enhance user stickiness. They want more people to use stablecoins, possibly through rewards, cashback, platform incentives, and expanding use cases; they also want reserve assets to generate higher yields. As long as there is profit pressure, there will be the temptation to "reach for yield," meaning investing reserves in assets with slightly higher returns but somewhat lower liquidity or safety.
This is the core risk of stablecoins: they look like cash in normal times but can become a tool for bank runs during stress. Once the market doubts a stablecoin can maintain its 1-dollar peg, holders will rush to redeem or sell, forcing issuers to liquidate reserve assets. If the scale is large enough, the risk could spill over from the crypto market to short-term debt, repos, bank deposits, and even broader financial markets.
Similar events have happened historically. In 19th-century America, during the free banking era, private banks could issue their own banknotes, resulting in a fragmented system with varying note values, fraud, and frequent bank failures. During the 2008 financial crisis, money market funds "broke the buck" due to holding depreciated assets, triggering wider panic. Stablecoins may seem like new technology, but essentially they represent an old problem: can private credit sustainably serve as public money?
Regulation can certainly reduce risks, such as requiring stablecoins to be backed by safe, highly liquid assets, limiting deposit-like interest, and strengthening disclosure and redemption arrangements. But regulation struggles to eliminate their structural contradictions entirely. The more successful stablecoins become, the less they resemble ordinary crypto applications and more like systemic payment infrastructure; once they become infrastructure, they must be regulated under monetary and banking principles, not just technology innovation or crypto asset logic.
More realistically, stablecoins are still some distance from a "real economic payment revolution." Most of their use remains concentrated in crypto trading, cross-border circumvention, dollarization demand, and regulatory arbitrage, with a very low proportion used for goods and services payments. Stablecoins tell a story of payment efficiency, but their current main stage is not everyday consumption but the crypto financial system.
So my judgment on stablecoins is: they will not disappear, nor are they without value. They indeed represent an important direction in payment technology, especially with real demand in cross-border payments, on-chain settlement, and dollar liquidity access. But they are not the "risk-free digital dollar" many imagine. The essence of stablecoins is private institutions packaging their own credit as dollar credit and improving circulation efficiency through blockchain.
The smaller they are, the more their problems resemble internal crypto market risks; the larger they grow, the closer their problems approach monetary and financial risks. The likely ultimate outcome for stablecoins is not wild growth but convergence with the banking system—either becoming strictly regulated payment financial institutions or being partially replaced by tokenized bank deposits.
In short, the value of stablecoins lies in efficiency, the risk lies in credit. They can improve payment efficiency but cannot create public monetary credit out of thin air. The more they aim to become mainstream financial infrastructure, the less likely they can remain on the regulatory fringe for long. $BTC $ETH $BSB
Asset: ETH
2. Cycle: Trend cycle 4H
3. Bias: High sell, low buy (bearish bias)
4. Expectation: Consider buying on a pullback to key levels combined with signals and momentum; consider selling upon reaching resistance levels combined with signals and momentum;
5. Upper resistance: 2463-2413; 2422-2368; 2382-2343; 2318-2292; 2219; around 2152-2134-2120
Lower support: 2073; around 2018-1978-1936-1908 (daily)
6. If opening a position, strictly control position size, set position based on stop loss, and it is not recommended to set stop loss exceeding 2%-5% of total position (for reference only)
From the current overall market perspective, the 78,600 level above is still regarded as the short-term dividing line between bulls and bears. As long as the price operates below this area, the overall pattern is clearly a weak downtrend! Therefore, if a rebound occurs later and a small-scale pattern shows a topping signal, it will be a good opportunity to set up short positions. The primary focus below is the 76,000 low level; once broken, the space will further open up!
Recently, due to repeated disturbances from external factors, combined with the conduction effect of technical aspects and obvious market sentiment divergence, the overall trading difficulty has significantly increased.
Therefore, facing the recent market, whether it is entry timing or space control, it is recommended to maintain patience and a conservative attitude as much as possible. After all, even if the overall direction is bearish, the market will inevitably experience repeated and volatile shakeouts, and precise timing control is the key to profitability now.
Bitcoin rebounds to around 77,800-78,100 to set up short positions, targeting the area near 76,000.
Ethereum rebounds to around 2,130-2,150 to set up short positions, targeting the area near 2,050. #纽交所母公司授权OKX推出原油合约
SOL, retracing to relieve pressure, mainly focusing on buying the dip in the future
From the 4-hour chart, the overall structure is a wide range, with key resistance at 98 above and key support at 75 below. Within the short term, bulls and bears are tugging back and forth, and there is no clear bullish or bearish signal on the smaller scale. Under this pattern, short-term entry is feasible.
On the hourly chart, after the previous surge to the 98 resistance, it once fell back to the 81 support area. After a small-scale recovery, it fell back again to the 83 support line. In the short term, the retracement lows are gradually moving higher.
If the price retraces to the 83-81 area in the future, one can directly go long, targeting 90.
The short-term market has once again touched the upper area near 77699. Although there was a short-term upward spike in the evening, the overall rebound trend has not ended, so it is currently not recommended to enter short positions. The current key resistance zone above is around 78000. Against the backdrop of maintaining a rebound trend during the day, the overall strategy still favors shorting on rallies.
Evening operation advice: focus on shorting BTC in the 77000-78000 range #加息重回讨论桌:机构信号集体转弱 $BTC $ETH $HYPE