When to Buy After a Market Dump 🧊
The worst entry after a dump is the emotional one. Price is red, everyone is scared, and the beginner buys because it feels cheap.
A cleaner entry appears when selling pressure starts losing control.
📉 Liquidations slow down
After a real flush, long liquidations usually hit first.
Then watch the next candles. If price stops making aggressive new lows, liquidation pressure fades, and downside speed drops, the market is no longer selling with the same force.
That is the first useful change.
📊 OI stops expanding
If price bounces and open interest starts rising fast again, late longs are already coming back.
That bounce is fragile.
Cleaner structure appears when OI has reset, stops expanding aggressively, and price can hold without fresh leverage.
⚠️ Funding and premium calm down
After a flush, funding usually cools. Premium index helps show whether the bounce is driven by futures chasing or spot absorption.
A bounce built only on leverage is weak.
Calmer funding, less aggressive premium and stable price action give a better setup.
🧩 Structure first
A big red candle is not enough.
Look for simple confirmations:
— price stops updating the low;
— rebound holds above the middle of the dump candle;
— pullback prints a higher low;
— broken level gets reclaimed;
— market breadth starts improving.
This gives a place for risk. Without structure, the trade is just hope.
📌 Entry plan
Buy in parts.
First entry after liquidation pressure slows.
Second after a higher low.
Third after structure starts to recover.
Keep cash out of the market. The first bounce often fails.
📊 Market Median filter
Market Median helps separate a local washout from broader risk-off.
If the whole market remains under pressure, buying every red candle is early. If the median starts recovering while liquidations fade and OI stays controlled, the setup becomes cleaner.
#long #DumpandDump $EDEN $FIDA $BSB


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