Alright, so if my signal says USDT.D is supposed to spike but instead it fails and goes negative, here’s what that means:
A spike in USDT.D usually signals that people are moving their money into Tether for safety, like during a market downturn. But if the spike doesn’t happen and it goes negative instead, it means traders are actually pulling money out of Tether and putting it back into cryptocurrencies.
This shift shows that the market might be more bullish or optimistic than my signal predicted. People aren’t looking for safety—they’re taking on risk, buying Bitcoin, Ethereum, or other coins.
It also means the market behavior is different from what my signal anticipated, so I’d probably need to reassess the conditions it’s based on. A signal like that failing could mean there’s unexpected strength in the market that wasn’t accounted for.
We’ll need more time to see how this unfolds. A correction is definitely due, but here’s the kicker—it’s likely to be only a minor one.
Last short position still stands.