SUI price impulsively tapped liquidity below, tricking early sellers A key supply zone offered a 1:4 R:R setup for patient traders Deeper liquidity zones may still be in play as price builds structure In the last article, I left you with a clear scenario based on the 4H timeframe: There was liquidity below. There was also a juicy supply zone above. And price?
It had to choose. Now let’s talk about what actually happened — and why it was a textbook trap for the impatient. The Move That Shook Out Retail So what did price decide to do?
Exactly what I hoped — it dipped hard into the liquidity below. But it didn’t just brush it. It smashed through it with impulse.
That kind of movement that makes retail traders panic-sell or jump into shorts thinking they’ve caught the start of a new downtrend. Here’s the thing: Many of those sellers completely ignored the supply above. They got caught reacting — instead of anticipating.
And if you’ve been reading my breakdowns, you probably saw this coming. Or at least paused long enough to ask: “Why would I sell now when there’s a clean supply above still untouched?” Patience = Profit: The Missed 1:4 Setup Let me tell you something that still stings when I think back to my earlier trading days… I used to be that guy. Selling on emotion, right after an impulsive move, ignoring the bigger structure.
And guess what? I missed setups exactly like this one. In this case, if you had simply waited for price to retrace back into that supply zone — and entered short from the edge with a stop on the last high — you’d be staring at a 1:4 risk-to-reward setup right now.
That’s the kind of trade that makes your week. But you only catch it by waiting, not chasing. What’s Next for SUI Price?
Now here’s where things get interesting again. If we extend that liquidity zone even lower, it lines up almost perfectly with some of the latest structure being formed. That’s not coincidence.
That’s smart money leaving a breadcrumb trail. So here’s one possible scenario: Now that price grabbed liquidity below and faked a breakdown, it might run back up and take out the liquidity sitting above, maybe even revisit that same supply zone. Then?
It could roll back down and target the deeper liquidity zones. But — and I always say this — nothing is 100% in trading. Price can and will do what it wants.
These aren’t certainties. They’re possibilities — based on structure, context, and logic. If you’re looking to get started with WEEX, they offer rewards for completing simple tasks like making a 500 USDT deposit and reaching 100,000 USDT in trading volume.
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