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Telegram trading communities are increasingly favoring tactical, indicator-driven setups as overall risk appetite remains subdued. Posts highlighting fresh “short signals” for Monero (XMR) and Stacks (STX) have spread quickly alongside sentiment readings described as “Extreme Fear.” The discussion reflects a market focus on specific price levels—entries, invalidation points, and near-term targets—while Bitcoin (BTC) continues to contend with resistance in the mid-$60,000s.
The activity was highlighted by the latest KOL Index, a community trend series based on Telegram message analysis technology from Tokenpost and DataMaxiPlus. The snapshot, drawn from posts that received outsized attention over the prior day, suggests bearish tactical calls are gaining traction. It also points to viral “target hit” updates that emphasize realized gains, often presented using leveraged return math.
The most circulated trade ideas centered on proposed short positions in XMR/USDT and STX/USDT, with authors using multiple technical indicators to justify their bias.
For XMR, contributors cited bearish alignment on daily and 4-hour timeframes, “EMA ribbon” selling pressure, and a rejection near RSI 55. Resistance was referenced close to the upper Bollinger Band around 331.4. Commonly shared entry zones were 328.2–329.0, with a stop-loss reference near 340.1. Comments praised the “template-like” structure of the call.
For STX, posters pointed to a sustained downtrend on both daily and 4-hour charts, a weakening EMA ribbon, and a bearish MACD crossover paired with rising downside momentum. The most repeated strategy outlined a short entry around 0.2129–0.2136, with invalidation near 0.2207. Community reactions suggested the appeal was driven not only by the bearish bias, but by the clear framing of risk parameters.
Alongside short proposals, Telegram channels circulated performance-style updates claiming targets were reached on multiple tokens, reinforcing engagement through “proof of hit targets” narratives.
Macro sentiment markers were used to explain why structured, level-based trade content is resonating. Briefing-style posts cited a total crypto market capitalization near $2.38 trillion (down about 0.3%), Bitcoin dominance around 56.2%, and a Fear & Greed Index reading of 12 out of 100, labeled “Extreme Fear.” In that backdrop, traders emphasized confirmation over prediction, arguing that breaks above or below key levels should guide positioning.
For BTC, the most repeated map framed the market as a tug-of-war around resistance near 67,131, with 66,189 highlighted as major support. Scenarios included potential follow-through if BTC clears 67,898, while failure to hold 66,189 was framed as increasing risk toward the mid-$65,000 area.
Ethereum (ETH) was discussed through a similar level-based lens: 2,020 as a key support, upside reference points around 2,070 and 2,154, and a downside path toward 1,972 if 1,992 breaks.
Not all altcoin discussion was bearish. Some channels circulated bullish-leaning technical structures for select names, presented as conditional opportunities rather than outright trend calls.
Overall, the Telegram-driven signal economy appears to be powered by two main engines: “indicator-based signals,” particularly bearish setups such as XMR and STX shorts, and viral “target hit” updates that quantify outcomes through leveraged return framing. With sentiment stuck in “Extreme Fear” and BTC range levels dominating discussion, the prevailing posture in these communities is to prioritize disciplined execution around predefined levels rather than broad directional bets.
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