The 1H chart continues to respect the ascending trendline, keeping the short-term bullish structure (HH & HL) intact.
My current plan:
📈 Buy Zone: Around $62,000 on a low-volume pullback. 🎯 Target: Around $67,000. 🛑 Stop Loss: $60,500.
If BTC breaks below and sweeps the previous low near $57,800, but quickly reclaims the long-term trendline, I'd still consider that a high-probability long setup rather than a reason to panic.
I'm not trying to predict every move.
I simply wait for a favorable risk-to-reward opportunity and let the market come to me.
What's your plan?
👍 Buy the dip? 🔄 Wait for confirmation? 📉 Expect another leg lower?
🚨 Start accumulating spot Bitcoin! Polymarket's latest odds for Bitcoin on July 12 suggest the market is still leaning bearish in the short term. Current implied probabilities: 🟢 Above 60K — 99% 🔴 Above 62K — 87% 🔵 Above 64K — 32% 🟠 Above 66K — 3% The biggest takeaway: • The market expects BTC to stay above 60K with high confidence. • Confidence drops sharply above 64K. • Very few traders expect a move above 66K. Overall, Polymarket is pricing a **range-bound market rather than a strong breakout**. Sentiment remains cautious despite the recent rebound. 📊 Do you think Bitcoin can reclaim 64K this weekend, or will we continue consolidating first? #Bitcoin #BTC
📈 Is it just me, or does it feel like not many people here are interested in U.S. stocks?
Most discussions seem to focus on BTC, ETH, and altcoins, while U.S. equities don't get much attention.
Personally, I believe U.S. stocks are one of the best asset classes for long-term investing. Many of the world's leading AI, semiconductor, and technology companies are listed there.
That's why I think adding U.S. stocks or ETFs as part of an overall asset allocation strategy makes a lot of sense.
Crypto offers high growth potential, while quality equities can provide long-term compounding. For me, it's not about choosing one over the other—it's about building a balanced portfolio.
What do you think?
Do you have any U.S. stocks or ETFs in your portfolio? 👇
🚨 The biggest AI opportunity may not be humanoid robots.
According to Citi's Physical AI Summit, the near-term winners are likely to be **task-specific robots**, not general-purpose humanoids.
Why?
• They solve real labor shortages. • They generate ROI much faster. • They collect proprietary real-world data. • They're already being deployed in logistics, warehouses, and automotive manufacturing.
The companies that build the strongest data flywheel and solve real deployment challenges—not the ones with the flashiest demos—may become the long-term winners.
Which Physical AI company are you most bullish on? 👇
Unpopular opinion:I think Polymarket is a better information tool than an investment opportunity. Prediction market prices simply represent the crowd's implied probability. For example, if a contract trades at $POLYMARKETthe market is pricing in roughly a 72% chance that the event will happen. As new information arrives, the price adjusts accordingly. Personally, I rarely trade prediction markets. Not because they're bad, but because I don't find the risk/reward attractive. You're not investing in a productive asset—you're betting on whether an event happens before a fixed deadline. Even if your analysis is right, unexpected news or market sentiment can quickly change the odds. I'd rather allocate my capital to assets with long-term value creation, such as ETFs, Bitcoin, or high-quality businesses. Prediction markets are fascinating to watch. They're just not where I want to compound my wealth. What's your view? #Polymarket #PredictionMarkets
The current odds suggest the market remains cautious, with participants assigning a relatively low probability to a strong upside move in the short term.
Prediction markets are great at reflecting market sentiment, but they're still probabilities—not guarantees.
Personally, I use them as a sentiment indicator rather than a trading signal.
On the daily chart: • Price is approaching a key moving average. • OBV continues to trend lower, suggesting distribution may not be over. • Short-term EMAs are starting to roll over.
So I don't think the correction is necessarily finished.
However, on the 4H chart, price has reached the EMA100 support, and selling volume is gradually declining.
I've started a very small satellite position here—not because I believe this is the bottom, but because the risk/reward is becoming more attractive.
If the stock continues to fall and offers a better valuation, I'll gradually add to my position.
Long-term investing isn't about buying the exact bottom. It's about managing risk and building positions with discipline.
🚀 If SpaceX joins the Nasdaq-100, don't be overly excited or overly worried.
Here's what it actually means:
• QQQ / QQQM investors don't need to do anything. • The ETF will automatically rebalance and include SpaceX. • If SpaceX performs well over time, its weight will naturally increase. • If it underperforms, its weight will decrease.
That's one of the biggest advantages of index investing.
You don't need to predict the next winner. The index adapts as the market evolves.
For long-term investors, this is just another rebalancing event—not a reason to change your investment strategy.
Stay focused on your asset allocation and long-term plan, not the headlines.