There's a trick I've figured out a long time ago—first release the trading signals, then follow up with the actual technical analysis. This way, the community can see the entire process. It sounds simple, but here's the problem: when you actually publish data-driven technical analysis, many people tend to dismiss it as FUD. Ironically, with the same content, just changing the order of publication can lead to vastly different reactions. This is the interesting aspect of market psychology—people tend to trust visible trading results more than the underlying analytical logic.
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PumpBeforeRug
· 15h ago
That's the trick, and it ends up causing people to see analysis as FUD. Human nature is just that realistic.
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DegenWhisperer
· 15h ago
Results are king; analysis is all nonsense.
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HashBrownies
· 16h ago
Hmm, this strategy is indeed brilliant. Ultimately, results matter. No matter how good the analysis is, people only look at the rise and fall.
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PanicSeller69
· 16h ago
Results are king; all analyses are armchair strategizing afterward.
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ReverseFOMOguy
· 16h ago
Amazing, this is why placing orders is more popular than writing analyses; results are king.
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RugResistant
· 16h ago
Results are king, analysis is just a complement... This is the reality of the crypto world.
There's a trick I've figured out a long time ago—first release the trading signals, then follow up with the actual technical analysis. This way, the community can see the entire process. It sounds simple, but here's the problem: when you actually publish data-driven technical analysis, many people tend to dismiss it as FUD. Ironically, with the same content, just changing the order of publication can lead to vastly different reactions. This is the interesting aspect of market psychology—people tend to trust visible trading results more than the underlying analytical logic.