Morning Crypto Twitter.
I see MANY PEOPLE excited for my demise.
They say, "You've been winning for too long! A 4 YEAR WINNING STREAK FINALLY COMES TO AN END!"
Now I know ALL of you are EAGER to label me a "homosexual" -
But one thing they CLEARLY didn't teach you AMATEURS in school was to READ THE SMALL PRINT.
First, did I mention OCTOBER in 2025?
No.
It COULD be 2026 or EVEN 2030.
I'm not a "sore loser" so I won't use that as an excuse.
Why would I?
Ethereum DID IN ACTUAL FACT $5000 [and YES - in October 2025!]
"Wait how, I don't see it? Prove it!"
WRAPPED STAKED ETHEREUM.
As far as I'm concerned, that is STILL Ethereum by all conventional means.
I am now going to update my bio to SIX TIME UNDEFEATED CHAMP whilst you LOSERS seethe that my straight card is still intact.
Better luck next time and THANKS FOR PLAYING.
~ Dr. Axius.
Just remember that we will all be buying $HYPE at the prices we deserve.
Some will enter their full stack at $4
Others will wait for $800 for confirmation
Which one will you be?
Your biggest trading flaw is being a full-time trader.
The more time you spend watching the screen, the worse your decision quality gets.
In crypto especially, every chart is biased toward fear.
You’ve been conditioned to believe any position can go to zero, and when you stare at candles long enough, that’s the only outcome your mind begins to see.
Charts almost never make you bullish, because bullish moments are brief and rare. The overwhelming majority of the time you spend watching them is filled with hesitation, doubt, and pressure to sell.
High-frequency watching creates fake information. A one-minute candle presents movement as meaning.
Good process is low-frequency by design.
Define the thesis, list the drivers, size the position to survive volatility, and limit how often you invite new decisions.
You don’t need more updates.
Check windows beat constant surveillance.
Decision windows beat impulse.
Aster is a clean example.
Living inside its chart will keep you on edge all day.
Step back, and the actual drivers are straightforward:
1. Spot listings still ahead on major exchanges
2. Buybacks still unannounced
3. UI/UX upgrades on the way
4. An L1 launch in the pipeline
5. A valuation gap versus HYPE yet to close, and the potential for a flippening narrative once the relative value clicks.
That stack of unfinished work is where the payoff comes from.
None of it improves because you watched the last 300 candles.
Conviction survives in low-frequency environments.
If the drivers are intact, the trade is intact.
If a driver breaks, the trade changes.
That is the only scoreboard that matters.
Measure your position against catalysts, not against the color of the last candle.
Your job is to stay aligned with the events that rerate the asset.