Q&A – Part 2
Q: Will an apparent pattern go to completion when repeating a previous historical movement?
A: That partly depends on current sentiment (market news) and world events that are relevant to active crypto players. It also partly depends on TA at those given moments. Wild Theory is about the ATTEMPT to manipulate price movement. It does not always go as planned, because manipulators also rely on market psychology. It is more than just forced whale movements and other shenanigans. On the other hand, their agenda might be to start one pattern, then abandon it at a certain point to begin another. I call this ‘strategic maneuvering’ and ‘flexible planning’.
Q: Where is Wild Theory most likely to fail?
A: Even if I spot and predict their manipulated movements accurately, their intended plan does NOT always work. I have seen ‘Wild’ movements set the bulls up for a run, with incredible real-world timing and then the bulls fumbled the ball. I recognized this because I already predicted what TEAM EVIL would do in advance... watched them do it… and then saw the outcome sputter and collapse.
Q: Is market manipulation here to stay?
A: Said manipulation of the MAJOR coins is probably short term. It requires the following to work well; lack of institutional investors, lack of liquidity, lack of market maturity, lack of regulation. It is also fueled by the existence of the new crypto futures market, but there is nothing we can do about that now.
Q: How do I include Wild Theory with ‘accepted/approved’ TA and EW methods?
A: Foremost, do your own TA or EW or both. Then seek other TA publications. Consider market sentiment and other indicators as your 'bias' when planning what might happen next. Place more weight to a TA chart forecast which matches the CURRENT public sentiment. Avoid fake news and stick to trusted reporting sites to get a feel for public and big player sentiment. Finally, before you make your play to buy or sell (or do nothing) -- isolate the ‘wild theory pattern’ that mirrors the current pattern. Look at the historical pivots of that pattern… then adjust the current pattern to existing resistance and support lines. Why? Current resistance/support are your price stops... if even brief. Measure the drops from past historical mirror patterns; notate the dollar amounts. These amounts might be what you can gain or lose. Finally, consider that a Wild Theory pattern might preside over the most recent TA that you trust. Ask this: How much margin of error can I bare if the TA I follow is wrong… and Wild Theory is right? Last, imagine the best outcome if you owned billions... think like a manipulator. Imagine an outcome that does NOT fit your wishes, but instead, what is in front of your nose. If your inclusion of all factors were weighted correctly… you should NAIL it.