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Topic: catalyst for a market (Read 100 times)

hero member
Activity: 2870
Merit: 574
May 27, 2019, 09:51:21 AM
#4
If you don't know what caused it,  there is no need to be trying to figure out what it was, just try to use the opportunity you have got wisely and that's it. If you keep on looking out to find out what made the price to go upx then I'm sorry you're wasting your time and won't find out what.
I agree with what you say, and there is no point to search on why and why because there is more reason that we still don't know even if we dig for deeper.
It is better we use the opportunity that we have and follow the market movements, make the profit, buy at a low price and sell at the high price.
We don't have to waste our time to search everything because we have a limit to search and if you keep doing that, I am afraid that you will run out of your time and you will regret it later.
hero member
Activity: 2506
Merit: 582
"CoinPoker.com"
May 27, 2019, 08:44:54 AM
#3
What’s more likely to act as a catalyst for a market — an RSI reading or a real-world exogenous or endogenous event?

The 5% wait patiently for a market to set up. As cryptocurrencies trade through time, prices are driven above and below zones where entry can not only provide a quantified amount of risk but also market feedback if the position is unprofitable.

In contrast the 95%, the inconsistent majority, buy highs and sell lows. Yes, sometimes this can work, and yes, it is a strategy at one specific point during the price cycle, that allows good risk management and market feedback, but most of the time buying the high and selling the low is highest risk lowest reward strategy a speculator can deploy.

Bitcoin is climbing a wall of worry without mass public participation. While news of Bitcoin’s rise might be making headlines in Australia, in other countries, like the UK, cryptocurrency rarely makes the news. In May 2019 the general public is still not invested in crypto. (As a test, ask around next time you’re out socialising)

What is behind this week’s 32.4% move up in Bitcoin? An indicator reading or are there background forces a work?
If you don't know what caused it,  there is no need to be trying to figure out what it was, just try to use the opportunity you have got wisely and that's it. If you keep on looking out to find out what made the price to go upx then I'm sorry you're wasting your time and won't find out what.

I have seen that a lot of people are trying to dig into this matter but they haven't been able to figure out anything about it. I have been seeing a lot of media sites guessing what it should be, but they are wasting their time as well, cause all they will continue to do is guess what they know nothing about. Nobody can tell what it is.
legendary
Activity: 1302
Merit: 1037
May 24, 2019, 05:42:28 AM
#2
What’s more likely to act as a catalyst for a market — an RSI reading or a real-world exogenous or endogenous event?

The 5% wait patiently for a market to set up. As cryptocurrencies trade through time, prices are driven above and below zones where entry can not only provide a quantified amount of risk but also market feedback if the position is unprofitable.

In contrast the 95%, the inconsistent majority, buy highs and sell lows. Yes, sometimes this can work, and yes, it is a strategy at one specific point during the price cycle, that allows good risk management and market feedback, but most of the time buying the high and selling the low is highest risk lowest reward strategy a speculator can deploy.

Bitcoin is climbing a wall of worry without mass public participation. While news of Bitcoin’s rise might be making headlines in Australia, in other countries, like the UK, cryptocurrency rarely makes the news. In May 2019 the general public is still not invested in crypto. (As a test, ask around next time you’re out socialising)

What is behind this week’s 32.4% move up in Bitcoin? An indicator reading or are there background forces a work?
Bitcoin is a global currency that you may never be able to see exactly the factor that is contributing to its surge, people use cryptocurrency in different parts of the world and there’s no way you as an individual can get the gist of what is affecting the price of bitcoin from other countries other than what you see on news.

When it comes to news, is it not those that decide to put it on news? So we have so many activities happening within bitcoin from different part of the world that may not be known to us, so if bitcoin is increasing without a tangible lead on news doesn’t mean that it is being manipulated.
newbie
Activity: 17
Merit: 1
May 23, 2019, 07:57:01 AM
#1
What’s more likely to act as a catalyst for a market — an RSI reading or a real-world exogenous or endogenous event?

The 5% wait patiently for a market to set up. As cryptocurrencies trade through time, prices are driven above and below zones where entry can not only provide a quantified amount of risk but also market feedback if the position is unprofitable.

In contrast the 95%, the inconsistent majority, buy highs and sell lows. Yes, sometimes this can work, and yes, it is a strategy at one specific point during the price cycle, that allows good risk management and market feedback, but most of the time buying the high and selling the low is highest risk lowest reward strategy a speculator can deploy.

Bitcoin is climbing a wall of worry without mass public participation. While news of Bitcoin’s rise might be making headlines in Australia, in other countries, like the UK, cryptocurrency rarely makes the news. In May 2019 the general public is still not invested in crypto. (As a test, ask around next time you’re out socialising)

What is behind this week’s 32.4% move up in Bitcoin? An indicator reading or are there background forces a work?
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