We are monitoring two liquidity zones on the Nasdaq chart. The price has now reached the first level—if sufficient liquidity forms at this point, we are considering opening a long position. From a risk management perspective: to prepare for the scenario going in the opposite direction, we have pre-set an order for the lower zone. If the price drops there, we want to be in a buying position from that level. Of course, there is a possibility— the market may not give us the chance to move within this lower box. It is important to leave a wide margin of movement to stay prepared for such situations.
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WalletWhisperer
· 19h ago
ngl the liquidity clustering here screams algorithmic footprints... those two zones aren't random, they're behavioral breadcrumbs. watching how whale wallets behave into that first level will tell you everything about what's actually coming next. the real signal isn't the price action—it's the transaction velocity at those nodes.
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LonelyAnchorman
· 19h ago
Alright, there are only two liquidity zones, and the first layer has been reached. Now we're waiting to see if there's enough volume to decide whether to go long. To be honest, this kind of waiting is the hardest.
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OldLeekNewSickle
· 19h ago
Here comes the trap-setting trick again, two-layer liquid flow zone? I've heard it too many times, and in the end, I still follow the crowd and jump in.
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DeFiVeteran
· 19h ago
Liquidity hunter, I understand this two-layer layout. The first layer waits for liquidity to accumulate, leaving a backup plan below, which is the correct approach.
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Honestly, most people fail because they refuse to leave room for movement and insist on going all-in with a full position.
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Chasing in the box? Haha, the real fear is that the market simply doesn't follow your box.
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Bottom fishing requires patience; it's safest to wait until the liquidity pool is fully built before taking action.
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This risk management attitude is good, but I'm worried that once you reach that lower layer, you'll change your mind again.
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DegenTherapist
· 20h ago
Liquidity Hunter is online, I'm watching the Nasdaq this wave closely
Wait, can I copy the order logic now? I need to learn risk control
It's set within the range below, if it drops further I'll buy the dip... maybe?
Two liquidity zones encircle, the middle part is really uncomfortable, hang in there
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fren_with_benefits
· 20h ago
Nasdaq's recent liquidity deployment is quite interesting, targeting two zones... The first level is in place, now it's just a matter of whether they can accumulate enough volume.
We are monitoring two liquidity zones on the Nasdaq chart. The price has now reached the first level—if sufficient liquidity forms at this point, we are considering opening a long position. From a risk management perspective: to prepare for the scenario going in the opposite direction, we have pre-set an order for the lower zone. If the price drops there, we want to be in a buying position from that level. Of course, there is a possibility— the market may not give us the chance to move within this lower box. It is important to leave a wide margin of movement to stay prepared for such situations.