18.05 Market Drop: Don’t Buy the Whole Dip at Once 📉
A sharp dump looks cheap to beginners. That is usually where control starts slipping.
📌 The first mistake
One big entry after a red candle means you already decided the bottom is in.
The market can bounce, reject, break lower, trigger more liquidations, reload late longs and flush again. A green reaction after the first drop does not make the move safe.
🧊 Why the knife is dangerous
Broad dumps move in layers.
Weak hands sell first. Leverage gets liquidated next. Then the market checks where fresh liquidity appears.
If you enter too big too early, you lose room to work. No cash left. No clean invalidation. No flexibility. The trade turns into waiting and hoping.
🧩 Better execution
Split the entry.
First part after the flush.
Second part after selling pressure slows.
Third part only after structure starts to recover.
Keep part of the balance out of the market.
That is boring execution, but it keeps the account alive.
⚠️ What to watch
Price is not enough.
Check open interest, liquidations, funding, premium index, bounce quality and market breadth. If price bounces while OI starts building again on longs, the crowd is already levering back in.
That kind of bounce can easily become the next flush.
📊 Market Median context
Market Median helps read the phase: local washout, normal pullback, or broader risk removal.
Beginners do not need to catch the exact bottom. They need to stay solvent until the risk becomes readable.
A dump can be bought.
In parts. With a plan. Without turning one red candle into a full-deposit bet.
#dump #long #Beginnersguide $EDEN $ZEC $PEAQ


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