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Crypto markets follow trends, and those who read them correctly have a significant advantage. Here, I share how I analyze trends myself and when I know whether I should be bullish or bearish.
First: Always start with higher timeframes. No matter what happens on the 4h or 1h chart — the daily or weekly chart ultimately decides. I then use the smaller timeframes for the perfect entry point within the larger trend.
How do I recognize a bullish trend? Simple: The price makes consistently higher highs and higher lows. That’s a sign that it’s moving upward. As long as the price doesn’t break a previous low, the bullish structure remains intact. Then I can stay optimistic and hold long positions.
The trap many fall into: They expect the price to go straight up. It doesn’t. On smaller timeframes, there are constant pullbacks, sometimes even 30% or more. That’s normal. When the price then falls into the key zone — the previous higher low — that’s often an ideal entry point. The goal: new highs.
Bearish trends work exactly the opposite. Lower highs and lower lows — that’s the signal that it’s bearish. If I want to short, I use the same method: wait for a pullback into the upper zone of the larger trend and look for a short setup there. The target is then new lows.
But here’s the critical part: Trends end. And that’s where most people lose their money. Psychologically, it’s difficult — when everyone is pessimistic and the trend turns bullish, many don’t want to accept it and keep shorting. Conversely: When the trend turns bearish, optimists still buy.
How do I recognize a trend reversal? Using the same method. In a bullish trend: if the price falls below the higher low, the bullish structure is broken. That’s the signal to change perspective. Some take profits here, others open short positions — depending on their trading style.
In a bearish trend: if the price breaks the lower highs, it shifts from bearish to bullish. That’s the confirmation.
The secret to success is simple: Be bullish when the trend is bullish. Be bearish when the trend is bearish. And change your stance when the trend changes. That’s the way to survive long-term and make consistent profits. Everything else is swimming against the current.