Bitcoin is nearing the end of it’s month-long potential bottoming out. This process has suffered from traders not able to see the forest through the trees. First, there was the V-Bottom reversal theory. Then there was the Bear Pennant break down. Then there was the Double Bottom reversal. But after all this time, it could be an Inverted Head & Shoulders.
As traders, we don't get to pick the bottom, we let the bottom pick itself. So if we're always blind to the structure of a bottom, how can we trade better to avoid surprises? What lessons can we learn from this month? Here I provide three. Then we apply these lessons to our current scenario.
Lesson 1: Hold Your Biases Lightly[/I]
It's tempting to catch the bottom of a reversal, but if you're not careful, you'll only catch a pullback. Unless you have the capital and risk to hold a negative position, play the short game instead of thinking that each bottom is "the one". It's important to have a bias, bullish or bearish, but make sure the length of time you're willing to be biased matches the above criteria. The reversal structure is always unknown, so be prepared to shed your bias at the drop of a hat. Know your support and resistances, and simply buy and sell the signals. Don't worry about missing the reversal, that's greed and emotion controlling your account, not process. Accept your lack of control and just follow your process.
Lesson 2: Find the Ideal Entry and Exit, then Choose the Non-ideal[/I]
Traders are always searching for the least risky entry and exit. It's always somewhere in the relative extremes and contain some ideal technicals. These are definitely safe trades, but these prices are almost never reached. Consider the bounce from $5,750. This is a minor support compared to the support around $5,000. If the bear pennant didn't fail, this major support might have been reached. But, according to the Laws of Bitcoin, this entry was too ideal, so the more aggressive entry was where our current bottom was found.
Lesson 3: Listen to the Prevailing Forecasts, then Ignore Them[/I]
Before our double bottom, forecasts were littered with mentions of $5,000. Then after our double bottom, forecasts switched to the next important level, $7,000. According to Lesson 2, we already know these levels are too ideal. But there's something more sinister at work when we listen to the forecasting echo chamber: we're more likely to ignore our own analyses and signals in favor of the prevailing wisdom. Karl Marx once said, "When the train of history hits a curve, the intellectuals fall off." Relying on prevailing forecasts is dangerous because they become prevailing mostly based on their emotional attractiveness. The effects can usually be seen through an increase or decrease in long or short positions that leave a movement in the opposite direction vulnerable. Know what traders are expecting, ignore them, then apply lessons 1 and 2.
[I]Where are we now?[/I]
We dropped from $6,800, thanks to the $7,000 prevailing forecasts, so now we apply our lessons. 1.) I’m bullish, so when do I become bear? My scenario is an Inverse Head & Shoulders. For it to remain reliable, the right shoulder must be higher than the left. This signals bullish strength in the pattern. So if we go below $6,120, I’m bear. And if we go up, but are rejected at the neckline, I’m bear. 2.) The ideal entry is around $6,000. This is the strongest, closest support, and is the best price that maintains a higher-low; comforting for bulls. But it’s too ideal. If we go up, it will be from a more aggressive option: where we are now, $6,260+. 3.) Coindesk's view is that we will test $6,000 in a day or two, so we ignore this. Let people think we’re going down further to more ideal levels, and wait for their short positions to facilitate our move back up while maintaining our bullish Inverse H&S. I do love it when a plan comes together. Let's see where our logic takes us.