The NIGHTUSDT trading competition is now in countdown mode, and sharp fluctuations are often likely to occur at critical moments. Many are predicting whether there will be concentrated sell-offs in the final stage.
From a technical perspective, peak trading hours are indeed prone to becoming the "harvesting zone" for major players. Some traders' strategy is to go short directly to absorb this wave. If the market only dips slightly (the so-called "long wick"), just treat it as if nothing happened. With reasonable stop-loss settings, losses are limited.
If you hold long positions, it is recommended to set your take-profit target above 1.2 in advance. This way, even if your reaction is slow, you won't be forced to hold the position through the decline. When closing positions, don't be greedy and sell everything at once. Instead, gradually reduce your holdings in batches according to preset time and position ratios. This can effectively reduce slippage impact.
The key is to have a plan and not to act impulsively at the last minute.
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LightningHarvester
· 7h ago
The biggest fear during the countdown phase is trembling hands. Gradually reducing positions in batches is really reliable.
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ZkSnarker
· 7h ago
well technically everyone's gonna get liquidated in the last 5 mins anyway lmao, the "plan ahead" energy is cute tho
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RuntimeError
· 7h ago
The biggest danger during the countdown phase is acting impulsively. You really need to set take-profit orders this time to avoid getting cut.
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GasFeeLover
· 7h ago
It's the same old story again, during the countdown phase the main players are harvesting, but how many actually make money?
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Gradually reducing positions is a good move, but I'm just worried about accidentally closing everything too early.
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Take profit above 1.2, but only if it can actually rise to that level. Right now, everyone is just messing around.
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Every time people say don't cram at the last minute, they turn around and chase highs to short. Ultimately, it's all about betting on probabilities.
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I'm actually waiting for this dump to continue, just afraid it won't dump.
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Shorting to absorb? You need to have a really strong mindset. One wrong move and you'll get liquidated in the opposite direction.
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No matter how perfect the plan is, it can't beat unexpected news. NIGHT is too unstable.
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ProofOfNothing
· 7h ago
During the countdown phase, the main players are taking profits. This round depends on who reacts fastest.
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Gradually reducing positions is still a reliable strategy; dumping everything at once is really just giving away money.
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1.2 take profit? I bet it can hit 1.5, but greed destroys everything, haha.
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Enter with a plan, exit in a panic—it's the old routine.
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Peak trading hours are like a meat grinder; no wonder so many people are experiencing explosive orders.
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Setting stop-losses properly can really save lives. I've seen many people blow up their accounts due to overconfidence.
The NIGHTUSDT trading competition is now in countdown mode, and sharp fluctuations are often likely to occur at critical moments. Many are predicting whether there will be concentrated sell-offs in the final stage.
From a technical perspective, peak trading hours are indeed prone to becoming the "harvesting zone" for major players. Some traders' strategy is to go short directly to absorb this wave. If the market only dips slightly (the so-called "long wick"), just treat it as if nothing happened. With reasonable stop-loss settings, losses are limited.
If you hold long positions, it is recommended to set your take-profit target above 1.2 in advance. This way, even if your reaction is slow, you won't be forced to hold the position through the decline. When closing positions, don't be greedy and sell everything at once. Instead, gradually reduce your holdings in batches according to preset time and position ratios. This can effectively reduce slippage impact.
The key is to have a plan and not to act impulsively at the last minute.