Have you noticed how quickly retail traders panic sell the moment a major asset retests its support, completely missing the macro structure?
Most futures traders end up getting liquidated because they chase green candles at resistance instead of buying quiet consolidation zones. They lose capital trying to time the absolute bottom rather than trading the actual market structure.
Let us look at a textbook case study with $SOL. While the crowd was bearish, the asset was quietly holding its key support zone around the eighty-two dollar mark. Entering a 10x leverage long between $82.00 and $82.30 with a tight stop loss at $77.50 offers a highly skewed risk-to-reward ratio. This is not about guessing. It is about trading the intact bullish structure.
The logic here is simple. If buyers defend this entry area, momentum naturally favors a continuation upward. The targets are clear, aiming for $85.50, $89.00, and eventually $94.00 once resistance breaks. By aligning this setup with the broader market strength of major assets like $BNB, we see how patience pays off much better than chasing hype.
Do you think setting tight stop losses below key support is the best way to manage risk here, or are we heading lower first?