Brothers, every day someone asks me: "Where can we bottom-fish for altcoins?" To be honest, no one can predict the lowest point, but I have a wild idea—directly referencing the 1011 black swan needle! That day the market crashed, many coins' needle positions might be the true bottom price that the market makers couldn't protect in time. For example, $ENA dropped to 0.13, $DOGE dropped to 0.095, and these levels with a 10% upward fluctuation is your safe zone for trying to bottom-fish. But be careful: if it even falls below the 1011 low point—what are you bottom-fishing for? That's not bottom-fishing, that's giving away your head! Today, let's talk about how to use the "black swan needle" to find opportunities, and why @usddio always emphasizes "seeing stability to build trust": bottom-fishing is not about gambling your life, it's about calculating probabilities.

Main text:
1. The 1011 black swan needle, why can it be referenced?

  1. Liquidity vacuum: That day the exchange crashed, the market maker couldn't defend the price, and the needle that popped out was often close to the real selling limit;

  2. Extreme emotions: The market is in extreme panic, and prices are prone to short-term over-correction.

  3. High margin of safety: Layout 10% above the needle position, even if wrong, it won't be too disastrous.

2. Several typical counterfeit 'needle position references'

  • $ENA: Around 0.1313, up 10% to 0.144 can be tested;

  • $DOGE: Around 0.095, up 10% to 0.104 can be considered;

  • $ADA: Around 0.27, up 10% to the 0.297 area;

  • $LINKAround 7.9, up 10% to about 8.7.
    Remember: These are not guaranteed to reach, but if they do, you can take a small position to bet on a rebound, set a stop loss!

3. Never touch this type of counterfeit!
If the coin price has fallen below the 1011 black swan lowest point—this indicates that the market maker has completely given up, or the project itself has collapsed. Are you still trying to catch the bottom? It might want to catch you! The fate of such coins often tends to zero; don’t be a martyr.

4. Why is it more important to be 'stable' when catching the bottom?
Many people want to go all in when they see a collapse, only to find themselves buying halfway up the mountain. This is why I often mention @usddio's 'stability shows trust': stability doesn't mean not catching the bottom, but controlling risk with discipline—buying in batches, setting stop losses, and not going all in, ensuring one survives to the bull market.

Summary:

  1. Look for the bottom at the 1011 needle position, try 10% above for trial and error;

  2. Stay away from the counterfeit that breaks through the needle position;

  3. Play with a small position, don't make a big one-time purchase.
    In a bear market, only those who survive have the right to tell stories.

@USDD - Decentralized USD #USDD以稳见信