I'm BlackCat a crypto blogger sharing real insights from year s in the market.No hype,just experience to help you cut t hrough the noise.🧠 X: @BlackcatTrader7
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$CRCL is sitting where weak hands usually get shaken out.
Long 109 – 115 SL: 104
TP1: 118 TP2: 125 TP3: 132
The correction already happened.
What matters now is that sellers haven’t been able to create another leg down.
Instead, price is stabilizing around support while downside momentum continues to fade. That’s often the first sign that demand is quietly building underneath the market.
Most traders will ignore this because it doesn’t look exciting yet.
That’s exactly the point.
The best longs rarely start when everyone is bullish.
They start when selling pressure disappears and buyers begin taking control before the crowd notices.
If this zone continues to hold, the next expansion higher could come faster than most expect.
I’d rather buy support while confidence is low than chase after the breakout.
Sellers have had multiple chances to slow this move down, yet price continues holding structure and pushing higher. That’s usually a sign demand is still in control.
Strong trends don’t ask for permission.
They consolidate, absorb supply, then expand again.
Most traders will wait for another breakout candle before getting involved.
The problem is that’s often where the easy money is already gone.
As long as this structure remains intact, I see no reason to fight the trend.
I’d rather ride momentum than stand in front of it.
Most traders only get interested after the breakout.
I’m watching what happens before it.
Price has been sitting on support while selling pressure continues to fade. Every attempt to push lower is getting less effective, which often means sellers are running out of inventory.
That’s when the risk/reward starts getting interesting.
The crowd still sees a weak chart.
But markets usually turn when nobody is paying attention.
If buyers keep defending this zone, it won’t take much momentum to trigger a strong rotation higher.
I’d rather accumulate near support than compete with everyone after the move starts.
$TAO is sitting where weak hands usually give up… and strong hands start paying attention.
Long 245 – 257
SL: 230
TP1: 268 TP2: 285 TP3: 310
The sell-off got everyone’s attention.
The lack of follow-through is what got mine.
Price has been pushed into support multiple times, yet sellers haven’t been able to force a real breakdown. Instead, the market is starting to stabilize while buyers quietly step back in.
That’s usually how reversals begin.
Not with explosive green candles.
With selling pressure running out of fuel.
Most traders will wait until TAO looks obviously bullish again.
But by then, the best part of the move is usually gone.
If this base keeps holding, the next leg higher can catch a lot of people off guard.
I’d rather buy where fear is fading than chase when confidence comes back.
$GUA keeps pushing higher… but the move is starting to lose its edge.
Short 0.794 – 0.834 SL: 0.880
TP1: 0.780 TP2: 0.740 TP3: 0.700
The rally already happened.
Now price is testing a zone where buyers need to prove they still have control.
So far, every push higher looks less convincing than the one before. Momentum is slowing, upside follow-through is fading, and the market is starting to feel crowded with late buyers chasing strength.
That’s usually where things get interesting.
Because the best shorts rarely appear when a chart looks weak.
They appear when a chart still looks strong enough to attract new longs.
If this resistance keeps holding, the unwind can be much faster than most people expect.
I’d rather short fading momentum than chase a move that’s already extended.
$ADA is sitting in the kind of zone most traders ignore… right before price starts moving.
Long 0.232 – 0.244 SL: 0.220
TP1: 0.248 TP2: 0.265 TP3: 0.282
Sellers had their chance to break this lower.
They couldn’t.
Instead of accelerating down, price is stabilizing around support while selling pressure gradually fades. That’s usually where demand starts building before the crowd notices.
The interesting part?
Most traders are still waiting for confirmation.
And strong moves often begin when people are still doubting them.
If this support keeps holding, it won’t take much buying pressure to push ADA into the next expansion phase.
I’d rather build a position while the market is uncertain than chase green candles after everyone turns bullish.
$HYPE got pulled back… but sellers couldn’t turn it into a breakdown.
Long 55 – 61.5
SL 50
TP1 63.5 TP2 67.5 TP3 71.5
The interesting thing here isn’t the dip.
It’s what happened after it.
Price stopped accelerating lower and started stabilizing around support. That usually tells you selling pressure is fading while buyers quietly begin stepping back in.
And strong trends often do this:
They shake people out first… then continue without waiting for everyone to feel comfortable again.
Most traders will wait for a breakout candle before believing the move.
By then, the clean RR is usually gone.
If this zone keeps holding, momentum can flip aggressively back to the upside.
I’d rather build a position during uncertainty than chase strength after the move starts running.
TradFi is at one of those moments where the market looks calm on the surface, but the message underneath is very loud. Gold has started pulling back after a strong run, and to me that does not automatically mean the trend is over. In fact, I think sharp pullbacks in strong assets often reveal whether a move was built on real demand or just crowded optimism. For now, gold still feels like a macro statement on uncertainty, inflation sensitivity, and the market’s need for protection.
At the same time, top US tech names are no longer moving as one clean group. The Mag 7 divergence matters. In my view, this is where the market starts separating true stalwarts from names that were simply riding liquidity. A few giants still look structurally dominant, but when leadership narrows this much, it usually tells us risk appetite is becoming more selective. That is not necessarily bearish, but it is definitely a warning that the next phase may reward stock picking over blind momentum.
Crude oil and broader commodities also deserve attention because they often expose what equities are trying to ignore. If global growth expectations improve, energy can turn fast. If growth weakens, oil can break support just as quickly. That’s why I think this cycle is less about prediction and more about reading the pressure between inflation, rates, geopolitics, and positioning.
My personal take: this is not a market for loud certainty. It is a market for patience, context, and reading rotation correctly. Gold, tech, and oil are all telling different parts of the same story. The question is not which one is “right” today, but which narrative the market will pay for next. What is your current view — do you think gold’s pullback is a buy-the-dip setup, Mag 7 leadership is still safe, or crude oil is about to surprise everyone?