$USELESS liquidity sweep

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**liquidity sweep** in trading happens when the price of a coin or asset quickly moves to a level where many stop-loss orders or pending orders (buy/sell) are placed, triggering them. These orders are often clustered at key support or resistance levels, like round numbers or recent highs/lows. Large players (like whales or institutions) may intentionally push the price to these levels to "sweep" or clear out this liquidity (execute these orders), allowing them to buy low or sell high before the price reverses.

**In simple words**: It’s when the market price suddenly moves to hit a bunch of stop-losses or pending orders, clearing them out, often before a big price move in the opposite direction. For example, if many traders set stop-losses just below a support level, a liquidity sweep might push the price down to trigger those stops, then bounce back up.

**How to use this in trading**:
- Watch key levels (support/resistance) on charts where stop-losses might cluster.
- Avoid placing stop-losses at obvious levels (e.g., exact round numbers like $0.10).
- For coins like #WLFI or #USELESS, check order books or volume spikes to spot potential sweeps.
- Manage risk by using smaller position sizes and setting stops away from crowded levels.

Always confirm price action and trends before acting, especially with volatile new coins.

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