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When the price begins to shake off short-term fluctuations, it's time to change your perspective—switch from the minute chart to the weekly chart. WAL's structure on higher timeframes remains stable, trend lines have not been broken, and instead, they become clearer through repeated market confirmations.
At this point, asking "Will WAL experience a significant pullback" is actually applying old experience to new market conditions. Market cycles are indeed full of opportunities, but each cycle's pattern will not be exactly the same. True divergences and turning points often do not appear during intense volatility but are instead lurking in the quietest moments. Those seemingly dull sideways consolidations might be brewing the next phase of momentum.
Consolidation is just building momentum; don't expect a new trend every day.
Old tricks applied to new tokens—it's definitely time to reflect on your way of thinking.
WAL's current structure is very clear; the trend line is perfectly fine. Why panic?
The quietest times are often the most dangerous, or perhaps the most opportune? I can't tell the difference either.
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I agree with the sideways consolidation part; the most easily overlooked time is often just before dawn
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The old tricks really don't work anymore; each round of the market indeed looks different, and previous experience can actually hinder judgment
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The quiet moments are the key, this statement hits the mark; many times before, the reversal happened during such times
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As long as the trend line isn't broken, there's still hope; no need to ask every day if it will collapse, just watch and see
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Looking at the weekly chart, it indeed appears stable, but I'm worried it might be a riot before calm.
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Anyone still watching the minute chart needs to catch up; changing the perspective broadens the view.
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Old experience applying to new markets is spot on—I was the one who got trapped.
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The quietest moments are the most dangerous, I believe that.
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This wave of WAL feels like laying the groundwork for something; let's wait and see.
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As long as the trend line isn't broken, holding onto this as a source of confidence is fine.
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You're right, the real opportunities are often in places nobody pays attention to.
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Sideways trading is just doing homework. Don't think that nothing is happening just because it's quiet.
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Always asking if there will be a pullback, really just using the script from the last cycle for this one. The market isn't that considerate.
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True turning points are hidden in the most boring periods; those anxious people simply can't see them.
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As long as the trend line is still there, don't worry blindly. Clarity is clarity.
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Watching the minute chart versus the weekly chart—living in two parallel worlds, but still making money with the latter.