🚨 $BTC just touched 69,108 and is starting to pull back
Big short opportunity developing ‼️
Entry Zone: 68,700 – 69,500
SL: 70,500
🎯 TP1: 68,500
🎯 TP2: 68,000
🎯 TP3: 67,300
BTCUSDT Perp: 68,888.8 (+2.56%)
Stay sharp friends… let’s make this move count 📉🔥
$SIREN $BULLA
Good morning, Guys Don’t get distracted… the market never pays emotional traders 🤫
$SIREN continues to show signs of weakness, and the direction is obvious if you’re paying attention 👀
Some call it “dead,” but trading isn’t about opinions — it’s about momentum and price action 📉
Stay patient, stay disciplined, and don’t let the noise change your view.
Follow for more live setups and Binance insights 🚀
Just got a short on $GUA , Fam! Been watching this extension for a long time, now it’s time to catch the pullback.
Rejection from the resistance, momentum slowing down. Looking for a move back toward lower liquidity.
Setup:
Entry: 0.462 – 0.472$
SL: 0.515$
TP1: 0.400$
TP2: 0.350$
TP3: 0.314$
Risk stays controlled. Don’t overexpose.
Drop a "LIKE", Fam! and comment your Take!
@RiseHigh_Community
$SIREN volatile again, and $STO back at 0.15$
What Is the Yield Curve and Why It Matters 📊
Thought for a couple of seconds 🤔👀
People buy or sell bonds based on what they expect from the economy and central banks.
If investors fear higher inflation, they usually sell bonds because fixed bond payments become less attractive in real terms. That pushes bond prices down and yields up.
If they expect stronger growth, they may also sell bonds because money moves into riskier assets and markets start pricing higher interest rates. That also pushes yields higher.
The yield curve shows the difference between short-term and long-term government bond yields. In normal conditions, longer bonds usually yield more than shorter ones. That means the curve is upward sloping.
👆 This chart shows one simple version of it: the 10-year Treasury yield minus the 1-year Treasury yield. When the spread is above 0, long-term yields are higher than short-term yields. When the spread drops below 0, the curve is inverted.
An inversion matters because it usually means the bond market expects weaker growth ahead. Short-term yields stay high because current policy is tight, while longer-term yields fall as investors start pricing slower growth, lower inflation, and future rate cuts.
🔍 That is why traders watch it as a recession signal. As the chart shows, inverted yield curves have appeared before each of the last 7 recessions. It is not a timing tool, but it has been one of the most respected macro warning signs.
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