oracle / FullCryptoGuide.md
zirobtc's picture
Upload folder using huggingface_hub
858826c

MEMECOINS 2025

Each video transcription is splitted in chapters

InterviewVideo: CookerFlips a trader Making $7.5M In 3 Days

The video is an episode of the TG Podcast, where the host ("threadguy") interviews the crypto trader "CookerFlips" about his recent $7.5 million profit on the ASTER token, his trading philosophy, and his view of the current market.

Chapter 1: The $7.5M ASTER Trade Deep Dive

This chapter covers the practical example of how the guest, CookerFlips, executed his highly profitable trade on ASTER.

  • Key Insight: The trade was initiated not by individual research, but by social signals. The guest woke up to numerous messages in his private group chat and calls from another trader, "Issa," who was "spam pinging" him about ASTER being "stupid early" , .

  • Practical Example (Trade Execution & Conviction):

    • Initial Analysis: He saw ASTER had only $40 million in volume . Instead of seeing this as a risk, he saw it as an opportunity, comparing it to a competitor, Avantis, which traded at $500 million in volume the previous day .
    • Going All-In: Based on this, he "nuked every single bag" he held, including those he was at a loss on, and put an initial $500,000 into ASTER .
    • The CZ Confluence: The primary thesis was the "confluence" that CZ (Changpeng Zhao, former CEO of Binance) had mentioned the project in the past and was likely to do so again , . He noted CZ had shilled ASTER more than any project other than BNB, which was a significant signal .
    • Adding to the Winner: When CZ did tweet about ASTER, confirming the thesis, the guest sold $150k-$200k of other assets and "threw another 500k in" , .
  • Key Insight (Trading Strategy):

    • Holding vs. Selling: As of the podcast, the guest had sold "zero" of his ASTER position . He believes it's too early to sell in "week one" and compares it to Hype's run from $2 to $30 in two weeks .
    • Invalidation Thesis: His plan is not to sell on price targets but based on the narrative. He would only sell if CZ made a statement implying ASTER is "not the main focus" or that he would support many DEXs equally .
    • Buying More: He even bought an additional $400,000 worth of ASTER the morning of the podcast, rotating profits from other meme coins he felt had less upside , .

Chapter 2: The Psychology of Fading a Big Win

The host analyzes his own cognitive biases and explains the "practical example" of why he "faded" (chose not to enter) the ASTER trade.

  • Key Insight (Self-Analysis): The host admits he completely missed the trade due to two main reasons:

    1. Blind Spot: Evaluating perpetual DEXs ("perps") is a "blind spot" in his trading skillset .
    2. Cognitive Bias: He used the cope that "CZ Binance Cabal crime is not a thesis" . He had been burned in the past by trades based on the idea that a "founder has to pump this" and incorrectly applied that logic here .
  • Key Insight (Counter-Argument): The guest agrees that "founder must pump" is usually a bad thesis, but argues this case was different. CZ had put his "name and face on this" so significantly that it was a much stronger signal than usual .

Chapter 3: Product vs. Price — Trading "Shit Products"

This chapter discusses the practical dilemma of trading projects where the product itself is flawed.

  • Practical Example ("Cards" Trade): The host explains he sold his position in "Cards" after he finally used the product and "fucking hate[d] this" . The guest agrees, calling the Cards website "complete dog shit" and its constant "restocks" a "huge deterrent" .

  • Key Insight (Trading "Bad" Products):

    • You must use a product to gather information .
    • If the product is bad, you then have to "take a look at everything else" and decide if the narrative or hype is strong enough to "ignore" the poor quality .
    • This was the exact case for ASTER. The guest admits he "kind of ignored" the fact that the ASTER platform was also "pretty shit" and had serious deposit/withdrawal issues . The CZ narrative was simply so strong that the product's quality was irrelevant .

Chapter 4: Market Analysis: The State of Memecoins

The conversation shifts to the broader market, focusing on why memecoins are struggling.

  • Key Insight: The memecoin trade is "pretty cooked" for the time being .
  • Key Insight (Market Shift): The market's "risk-on indicator" has shifted. It used to be Fartcoin , but now traders are more interested in "bidding fundamental coins" that have a business model and make money, such as Pump, Hype, and ASTER , .
  • Key Insight (Cyclical Nature): Memes "will always have its place" and will have another run, but it won't be like the recent frenzy for "a quite a long time" , .
  • Practical Advice: The guest advises memecoin traders to use this slow period to "educate yourself on the broader side of DeFi" rather than forcing trades in a dead market .

Chapter 5: Evolving as a Trader & Filtering "Crypto Twitter" (CT)

The guest describes his personal evolution and provides practical advice on how to use social media for trading.

  • Key Insight (Trader Evolution): The guest has been in crypto for "nearly a decade" . His style has evolved from being "naively bullish" (e.g., holding ETH from $50 to $1,000 and all the way back down to $300 ) to being more willing to take profits. However, he will still hold projects he truly believes in, like Hype, for many months .
  • Key Insight (Trader Psychology): He attributes his success to two things:
    1. Emotional Control: He is "very mellow" and does not get euphoric on big wins or depressed on big losses .
    2. Avoiding Surface-Level Thinking: He avoids basic theses like "this is funny, I'm gonna buy it" and instead knows how to find and analyze real data from sources like DeFi Llama .
  • Practical Advice (Filtering CT):
    • The host complains that CT is full of "max bear posting" which can negatively influence decisions.
    • The guest's solution is to "filter all the noise" . He suggests traders should unfollow "trenchers" (low-cap traders) who just post P&L screenshots and instead follow OGs, VCs, and builders who provide "a broader horizon of crypto in general" .

Chapter 6: Future Outlook & Coins to Watch

The guest provides his bullish long-term outlook and lists specific projects he is monitoring.

  • Key Insight (Market Outlook): He remains "naively bullish on the space in general" . He dismisses "cycle top" calls from influential accounts like Ansom, stating, "I don't think Ansom's that smart" .
  • Practical Example (Coins to Watch): The guest is actively monitoring the following projects and narratives:
    • Avantis: He sees this as the primary "Coinbase trade" for perpetual DEXs .
    • Athena (ENA): He is "very bullish" on it as a leader in the stablecoin space .
    • Plasma: Another stablecoin project he is watching .
    • Lighter & EdgeX: Two other perpetual DEX platforms he is paying "close attention" to , .
    • Fracks: A project he is "looking at" .

The biggest Interview of the TOP 2 most profitable traders (Cupsey) and (Profit)

Chapter 1: Introduction & Current Market

This section covers the traders' introductions, their view on the current market, and Cupsey's influence on the trading "meta."

Key Insights:

  • Current Market State: The market is described as "pretty ass," though there are still small opportunities .
  • Cupsey's Role in the Meta: Cupsey acknowledges he may have played a role in changing the Solana chain trading meta (implying a faster, quick-flip style) but believes if it wasn't him, someone else would have done it .
  • Evolution of the Meta: He notes the current meta is far more extreme than his original style, with traders now using 10 multi-wallets to buy coins before they even fully launch .
  • Market Outlook: Cupsey expresses hope that the on-chain market will return to its peak, suggesting it's "slowly returning" and needs "majors" (major coins) to keep ripping up and new on-chain catalysts .

Chapter 2: Missed Opportunities & The "Crime" Meta

This chapter details significant missed trades and the traders' perspective on the prevalence of coordinated, "crime-like" activity in the market.

Key Insights:

  • The "Crime" Meta: Both traders discuss how the market has shifted. Profit mentions it's "crime season" , and Cupsey estimates that a high percentage, perhaps 80%, of current runners are "crime" (coordinated manipulation) .
  • Adapting to "Crime": Cupsey states that being a good trader now involves being able to "spot crime and you sneak into the crime" .
  • Spotting "Crime": This is done by digging deep into wallets, analyzing price action, and identifying which groups or "mini-cabals" are pushing a specific coin. Cupsey notes many of these groups reuse the same wallets, making them identifiable .

Practical Examples (Missed Trades):

  • Arc (Cupsey): Cupsey bought Arc at an 8K market cap with three SOL. He saw the site looked good but sold for a tiny 0.5 SOL profit because the team wasn't posting. He estimates he bought around 5% of the total supply, which would have been worth an enormous amount .
  • Mudang (Cupsey): He had a similar miss, holding six SOL worth of Mudang at a 20K market cap .
  • Useless (Profit & Cupsey): Profit missed "Useless" because it was already too high by the time he was at his PC . Cupsey's group (Pioneer) had a full thesis on "Useless" at a 60K market cap, but none of them held it except for a trader named "Cooker," who was up around 3 million on it .

Chapter 3: Specific Trades & Market Mechanics (Practical Examples)

This section focuses on specific, well-known trades and the mechanics behind them, particularly "sniping."

Practical Examples (Specific Trades):

  • Libra Trade (Profit & Cupsey): This was a highly controversial trade. Profit "round-tripped" (made and then lost) a significant amount . Cupsey notes that in his call, everyone lost money except for "Cooker" . Profit was one of the first large buyers, but he denies accusations that it was based on insider information, stating it was based on on-chain data .
  • John Pork Trade (Profit): This was another trade Profit was accused of having inside info on. He again denies this, stating, "I bought because of the chain" . The specific signal was a "dormant wallet" (a wallet inactive for hundreds of days) that suddenly bought the coin, prompting him to buy it too .
  • Solo AI Trade (Profit): Profit mentions making seven figures on this trade .
  • Sorcin Coin (Cupsey): This was Cupsey's first six-figure profit play. The coin was based on a BlackRock representative talking about it in a live interview. He hit this milestone trade in January right after waking up and immediately hit another six-figure P&L right after .
  • Nero (Shada): Cupsey cites this as an iconic trade, where a trader named Shada was on stream holding both "Nero" coins and was up multiple six-figures on both simultaneously .
  • Ark (Boougga): Cupsey mentions this as a uniquely iconic trade where Boougga, a pro gamer, turned three SOL into approximately $1 million .

Practical Examples (Trading Mechanics):

  • Sniping (Profit): Profit provides a detailed explanation of sniping, which was a dominant strategy in January .
    • How it worked: Traders used a "Twitter monitor" to catch a new coin's Contract Address (CA) as soon as it was tweeted .
    • The Tool: They used Telegram (TG) bots like Bloom and Banana .
    • The Strategy: You would set the bot to buy a minimum percentage of the supply (e.g., 10-14%) for a large amount of SOL (e.g., 200-250 SOL) to be the "first CX" (first buyer). You would also include a high "bribe" (priority fee) to ensure your transaction was processed first .
    • Profit's Example: He recalls a trade where he used a 500 SOL fee and a 500 SOL bribe, which was "retarded" and unnecessary, but he still made 600K on the snipe .
    • Current State: Sniping is described as "pretty much gone" because coins now migrate instantly from platforms like Pump.fun .

Chapter 4: Trading Styles & Grinding (Practical Examples)

This chapter explores the traders' personal strategies, work ethic, and the psychological toll of trading.

Key Insights:

  • The Grind: Both traders emphasize the extreme hours required. Cupsey trades 16 hours a day and says he was scanning 18 hours a day during the peak .
  • Motivation: Despite having made millions, they are both driven by the "love of the game" and the feeling that not trading is like leaving "free money on the table" , . Cupsey says it feels "weird" when he's not grinding .
  • Psychological Toll: Both agree their brains are "fried" and their dopamine receptors are "fucked" from the fast-paced, high-P&L nature of crypto trading . They joke that it would take a year with no internet to recover .
  • Sharpening Your Blade: Cupsey advocates for grinding even when the market is "dead," as he did. He says this "sharpens your blade" so you are ready and experienced when the market gets good again .

Practical Examples (Trading Styles):

  • "Cupsy Mode" (Cupsey): Cupsey defines his own famous trading style as "throwing into anything with a pulse and just hoping it's something" . He looks at it, sees it's nothing, cuts it quickly, and goes to the next trade. If it does show promise, he holds and researches it more .
  • Trading Volume: At his peak, Cupsey was trading 300 or more coins per day .
  • Trading Style Evolution (Profit): Profit notes he has swapped his trading style "like five different times" . He says his current style was heavily inspired by a trader named "Durant" .
  • The "Durant" Style (Profit): In January, he and Durant decided to "start buying every single coin that we think is good and stop like watching it." This led to a "generational run" for both of them .

Chapter 5: Profit Taking & Trader Anonymity

This section covers the traders' strategies for securing profits and how they manage their wealth and identity in their personal lives.

Key Insights:

  • Profit's Profit-Taking: Profit is a "stable maxi." He preaches stabling 50% of big wins and 100% of "really big wins." He has been 80-90% in stables for almost a year .
  • Cupsey's Profit-Taking: Cupsey is also a "stable maxi." He stacks SOL and then converts it to stables when SOL hits a price he likes .
  • Exit Number: Profit says he would "walk away" (or be 90% done) if he hit 50 million+ . Cupsey says he just takes it "day by day" .
  • Anonymity: Both traders live a "double life." Their real-life "IRL homies" have "not a single clue" about their crypto success or identity. They just think they are unemployed "one of the bros" , .

Chapter 6: Top Traders & Trading Philosophies

The traders discuss who they respect most in the space and their differing approaches to finding trades.

Key Insights:

  • Cupsey's Top 5 (No Order): Profit, Durant, Nim, and Nasim (the sniper) , , . He highlights "Nim" as an "underground" trader in his group (Pioneer) who "hits so many fat P&Ls" and holds for huge gains .
  • Profit's Top 5 (No Order): Mentions "underground traders" the audience wouldn't know, including JG, Wreck, Ninja, Pal, and Cahoot .
  • Copy Trading vs. Raw Scanning: This reveals a major difference in their styles.
    • Profit: States that 70% of his trading is "copy trading like wallets" .
    • Cupsey: Says he "never tracked wallets" during his entire big run. He only used trackers to see if a big wick was a known entity. He only started tracking wallets on his chart (via Photon) in the last two months .
  • Finding Cupsey's Wallet: Cupsey notes that when he switched to a fresh wallet, he didn't tell anyone, but people "automatically found it" and started copying him just based on his unique trading style .

smartly flipping $500 to $100,000 trading memecoins by jekyll koller

Chapter 2: Essential Tool 1: GMGN.ai Trading Terminal (0:54 - 5:50)

The speaker identifies GMGN.ai as the best trading terminal for this challenge. He provides a detailed walkthrough of how to set it up for maximum efficiency.

  • Key Insight (0:54 - 1:12): GMGN.ai is recommended for its beginner-friendly features and smooth performance without requiring a high-end PC.

  • Key Insight (1:19 - 1:36): The first step is to clean up the terminal. The speaker advises removing unnecessary metrics from the main dashboard to create a clean layout.

  • Practical Example (Coin View Customization) (1:48 - 2:33): The speaker details his preferred custom layout for viewing an individual coin, which he believes provides the most crucial information at a glance:

    • Holders Tab (1:57): Kept open to instantly see "bubble maps" (visual representations of token distribution).
    • Money Flow (2:01): A section to see all money flowing in and out of the token.
    • Instant Trade Panel (2:04): Allows for one-click buying and selling.
    • Right-Hand Column (2:08 - 2:27): Configured to show "Same Name Tokens" (to spot fakes), "Trading Modules" (for entry/exit strategies), the "Token Banner," and "Avatar Reused Tokens."
  • Practical Example (Filter Setup - Solana) (2:34 - 4:19): This is the most detailed practical guide. The speaker sets up specific filters for three different categories of Solana tokens.

    • 1. "New Pairs" Filter (2:34 - 3:15):
      • Launchpads: Selects only "Pump.fun" and "Bonk" (2:37). He justifies this by showing a Dune Analytics chart (2:41) that implies other launchpads are "complete dark shit."
      • Metrics: Checks "Original Avatar" (to find "real, original cooks, not vamps") and "Exclude Oxento" (2:49 - 2:56).
      • Transactions: Sets a minimum of "1" transaction in the last "1 hour" to filter out dead tokens (2:59 - 3:02).
      • Socials: Checks "with at least 1 social" to ensure the token has some information attached (3:07 - 3:14).
    • 2. "Almost Bonded" Filter (3:16 - 3:55):
      • Launchpads & Metrics: Same as "New Pairs."
      • Key Filters: This is the most important section for the challenge.
        • Maximum Age: 40 minutes (3:39).
        • Minimum Market Cap: $15k (3:40).
        • Minimum Volume (1h): $10k (3:41).
        • Total Fees: At least 0.5 (3:50).
      • Rationale (3:43 - 3:54): Anything below these metrics is "not interesting enough for other traders." The fee filter helps "get rid of the botted tokens."
    • 3. "Migrated" Filter (3:56 - 4:18):
      • Key Filters: Sets "Minimum Market Cap" to $30k (4:00) and "with at least 1 social" (4:02).
      • Rationale (4:08 - 4:18): He keeps this filter broad because migrated coins (those that have completed their bonding curve) often "dictate the ongoing narrative."
  • Practical Example (Wallet Tracker Setup) (4:20 - 5:01):

    • Purpose: To import a list of wallets belonging to "major KOLs (Key Opinion Leaders), coin bonders, operation cheats, and degen traders" (4:22 - 4:30).
    • Process: He instructs the viewer to get a text file from his Telegram channel (4:40), copy the contents (4:45), click "Import" on GMGN (4:47), paste the list into the box (4:48), and confirm (4:50).
    • Strategy: He advises disabling all notifications for these wallets (4:56), as they will be used for a different strategy to be explained later.
  • Practical Example (Filter Setup - BSC) (5:02 - 5:50):

    • The speaker shows how to switch the network to BSC (Binance Smart Chain) (5:09 - 5:12).
    • He applies a simple filter across "New," "Almost Bonded," and "Migrated" sections:
      • Token Type: "For Meme" only (5:29).
      • Metrics: "Original Avatar" (5:37).
      • Socials: "with at least 1 social" (5:43).
    • He also sets minimums for "Almost Bonded" (Max Age 40m, Min MCap $40k, Min Vol $20k) (5:38 - 5:42) and "Migrated" (Min MCap $50k) (5:45 - 5:49).

Chapter 3: Essential Tool 2: Dex Screener (5:51 - 7:04)

The second tool is Dex Screener, which is used for high-level market awareness and opportunity discovery.

  • Key Insight (5:51 - 6:00): Dex Screener is described as the "first thing you should be looking at when you wake up."
  • Key Insight (6:07 - 6:15): The goal is to use it to determine "which communities are the most popping" on both Solana and BSC, understand why they are popping (who is pushing them), and "potentially allocate a position."
  • Practical Example (ARES Token Discovery) (6:29 - 6:53): The speaker provides a concrete example of his discovery process using the tool.
    1. Discovery (6:29): He was scrolling Dex Screener and noticed a token called "ARES."
    2. Analysis (6:30 - 6:38): It caught his attention because it was on the TRON network, which he describes as an "underdog" chain where memecoins have been "gone for quite a while."
    3. Research (6:39 - 6:44): He then checked the token's website (6:39) and X (Twitter) feed (6:41) and noticed "a few familiar names shilling it."
    4. Outcome (6:45 - 6:53): He regrets not buying, as he claims the token did over 100x from when he first saw it. This example illustrates the workflow: Discover (Dex Screener) -> Analyze (Narrative) -> Research (Socials).

Chapter 4: Essential Tool 3: Telegram & X (Twitter) (7:05 - 8:53)

The final set of tools revolves around social media for information gathering, or "alpha."

  • Key Insight (7:05 - 7:17): The third tool is tracking "good KOL channels on Telegram." He warns that 90% of KOLs use their followers for exit liquidity, but a few "decent ones" exist.

  • Key Insight (7:18 - 7:22): He provides examples of channels he considers decent: "Cooker's," "Lixes," "Sachs," and "Siders."

  • Key Insight (8:00 - 8:05): The speaker calls X (Twitter) the "most alpha delta omega social media platform."

  • Practical Example (Finding Telegrams via X) (7:25 - 7:51): He shows the process of finding good Telegram channels.

    1. Go to X (Twitter) and find a trader with a "solid reputation" (7:25).
    2. He searches for "Cooker" (7:27), goes to his profile, and clicks his Linktree-style link (7:29).
    3. From that link, he finds and joins the "Cooler's Cooks" Telegram channel (7:31).
    4. He repeats this process for "Sachs (aka 'Jup Guy')" (7:35 - 7:41) and "Jekyll" (7:44 - 7:48).
  • Key Insight (8:04 - 8:25): He outlines two primary uses for X:

    1. As a "Daily Newspaper": He reads both his "Following" feed and the "For You" feed, stating that "you can find a lot of valuable information" on both (8:22 - 8:25).
    2. As a "Research Tool" (8:26).
  • Practical Example (Researching a Token on X) (8:27 - 8:37):

    • Connecting to the "ARES" example, he explains that after finding a token on Dex Screener, he would copy its Contract Address (CA).
    • He would then paste that CA into the X search bar to see who is talking about it.
  • Practical Example (The "TROLL" Token) (8:39 - 9:13):

    • He uses the TROLL token as a major example of X's power.
    • He shows the X profile of "Shadow" (8:40), a KOL who "called TROLL at 700k market cap" (8:56).
    • He shows the TROLL chart on Dex Screener (8:54), noting he "didn't pay much attention" when he saw the post (8:58).
    • He then shows the token's massive rise to an all-time high of nearly $300 million, highlighting the "pain" of missing alpha that was publicly available on X (9:01 - 9:13).

Chapter 5: Conclusion and Next Steps (8:54 - 9:43)

  • Key Insight (9:14 - 9:22): The speaker recaps the essential open-source tools (GMGN, Dex Screener, Telegram, X) and states that by using them, "you're already ahead of the majority."
  • Key Insight (9:29 - 9:36): He concludes by stating the next video (Preparation 2/2) will cover the "most important part": risk management and strategy for the $500 to $100,000 challenge.

Preparation 2/2

Chapter 1: Introduction & Trading Mentality (0:00 - 1:02)

  • (0:00 - 0:17): This video is the second and final preparation episode for a memecoin trading challenge aiming to turn $500 into $100,000.
  • (0:18 - 0:38): The speaker acknowledges the importance of having the right "mentality" for trading, specifically avoiding emotional decisions.
  • (0:39 - 0:47): He deliberately skips a detailed psychology lesson, stating that viewers can find that content elsewhere, and he will cover it in future live streams if requested.
  • (0:48 - 1:02): The strategy to be presented is described as effective for any portfolio size, easy to follow, and has been tested multiple times.

Chapter 2: The Trading Plan: Risk Management (1:02 - 3:34)

The speaker introduces his trading plan from a PDF document, focusing on the "Risk Management" section.

  • (1:12 - 1:32): Rule 1: Have an exit plan BEFORE you enter a trade. You must follow your plan and have a clear exit strategy (both for profit and loss) before committing any capital.
  • (2:58 - 3:15): Rule 2: Always take out the initials at 2x (100% profit) if possible. The speaker advocates for securing your initial investment to create a "risk-free trade" rather than risking the entire position for more gains.
  • (3:31 - 3:34): Rule 3: Manage your capital: FIAT > Treasury > Trading Wallet. Profits should be moved from the trading wallet to a "Treasury" (a separate, safer wallet) at the end of each trading day to maintain discipline.

Practical Example: Setting a Pre-Trade Plan (1:33 - 2:57)

The speaker illustrates the wrong and right way to apply Rule 1 using a trading chart on the GMGN.ai platform.

  • Incorrect Way (1:33 - 1:55): Entering a position first and then starting to stress and wonder, "Is this good? Where do I exit? Where do I take profit?"
  • Correct Way (2:30 - 2:57): Before trading, you analyze the chart and set your levels. The speaker draws on the chart:
    • Entry: Identify a target entry point.
    • Take Profit (TP): Define multiple TP levels (e.g., "I'm taking 200% profit on this one," and "if it goes higher, at 300% I'm fully out").
    • Stop Loss (SL): Define a clear invalidation point.
    • He concludes: "You simply preset all of your levels up before you even enter a trade."

Chapter 3: The Trading Plan: Wallet Management System (3:35 - 5:11)

This chapter expands on Risk Management Rule 3, detailing a three-wallet system to protect capital.

  • (3:35 - 3:55): The speaker emphasizes treating trading like a "real full-time business," not a "fun gamble."
  • (3:56 - 4:10): He outlines the three-wallet structure:
    1. FIAT: Your real-world bank account.
    2. Treasury Wallet: A secure crypto wallet (e.g., a Ledger, Trezor, or a separate Phantom wallet) that is not connected to any trading platforms. This holds your main capital.
    3. Trading Wallet: A "burner" wallet that you connect to platforms like GMGN.ai. It only holds the capital for your current trading session.

Practical Example: Daily Capital Management (4:11 - 5:01)

  • Start of Day (4:11 - 4:38): Your Treasury Wallet holds your main capital (e.g., $10,000 USDC). You decide your trading session "starting capital" is $1,000. You convert $1,000 USDC to SOL and send it from your Treasury Wallet to your Trading Wallet.
  • End of Day (4:39 - 5:01): You finish trading and your Trading Wallet now holds $2,000 of SOL (a $1,000 profit). You send the $1,000 profit back to your Treasury Wallet. The next day, you start again with only the $1,000 in your Trading Wallet, protecting your profits.

Chapter 4: The Trading Plan: Challenge Setup & Tools (5:12 - 8:03)

The speaker covers the final risk management rules and the practical setup for the challenge.

  • (5:12 - 5:23): Rule 4: Shut your trading device ONLY after setting an exit strategy (TP/SL) or fully exiting. Never leave a trade open and walk away from your device.
  • (5:24 - 5:39): Rule 5: Starting capital for the challenge is $500. This will be split into two: $250 for the SOL chain and $250 for the BSC chain.

Practical Example: Bridging Funds (5:59 - 6:21)

  • The speaker shows how to get funds onto the BSC chain if you only have SOL. He recommends a bridging service like ChangeNOW.io.
  • He demonstrates setting up a swap to send 2 SOL to receive approximately 0.337 BNB, which would then be sent to his BSC payout wallet.

Practical Example: Platform Preset Configuration (GMGN.ai) (6:43 - 8:03)

The speaker configures his trading presets on GMGN.ai for speed and consistency.

  • SOL Chain Presets (6:43 - 7:15):

    • Custom Buy Amount: Sets P1 (Preset 1) to 0.2 SOL, P2 to 0.3, P3 to 0.4, etc.
    • Slippage: 30% for both buys and sells.
    • Priority Fee: Default (0.0005).
    • Anti-MEV RPC: Enabled for buys, disabled for sells.
  • BSC Chain Presets (7:16 - 8:03):

    • Custom Buy Amount: Sets P1 to 0.02 BNB, P2 to 0.04, etc. (Noting this is ~$25 to $150).
    • Slippage: 30% for both buys and sells.
    • Gas: Set to "Low."
    • Anti-MEV RPC: Enabled.
    • Auto Approve: Enabled (for BSC).

Chapter 5: The Trading Plan: Strategies (8:04 - 14:26)

The speaker moves to the "Strategies" section of his plan, outlining the step-by-step process for finding and executing a trade.

  • (8:14 - 8:29): Strategy Rule 1: Determine the on-going narrative. He uses the GMGN "trenches" view to see a "precious metals" narrative (gold, silver) is currently trending.
  • (8:30 - 8:49): Cross-Verification: He shows how to confirm this narrative using other tools:
    • DEX Screener: Filtering by "New Pairs."
    • Twitter (X): Searching for relevant keywords.
    • Discord: Checking what "KOLs" (Key Opinion Leaders) are discussing.
  • (9:02 - 9:06): Strategy Rule 2: Focus on coins that fit the narrative OR have "clever lore."
  • (9:07 - 9:24): Strategy Rule 3: Check the socials. Find a potential coin and immediately check its Twitter, website, and community to see if the "lore" is good and the community is active.
  • (9:25 - 9:39): Strategy Rule 4: Check the coin's metrics. Look at how "heavily it is bonded" (funded) and check the "holding the supply" (holder distribution).
  • (9:57 - 10:15): Strategy Rule 5: Decide your strategy. Check if the coin has been "previously created" (a relaunch) or if there are other coins with the same avatar.
  • (11:31 - 11:50): Strategy Rule 6: Strategy in place? (Entry). This rule is about how to enter. For a narrative coin, "never... blast the top." The strategy is to wait for a dip, often created by an early holder or KOL selling.
  • (11:51 - 12:45): Strategy Rule 7: Take the initials (at 100% profit) to have a risk-free trade. This also involves setting preset TP and SL levels.
  • (13:09 - 13:22): Stop Loss Strategy: His personal stop loss for the challenge will be 35% to a maximum of 50% below his entry price.
  • (14:19 - 14:26): Strategy Rule 8: Full breakdown 35-50%? This is the Stop Loss rule from the PDF, confirming his strategy.

Practical Example: Vetting a Coin ("THE TEN") (9:07 - 10:45)

  • Finds Coin (9:07): He uses "THE TEN (10B)" as an example from the GMGN trenches.
  • Check Socials (9:15): He opens the coin's Twitter (X) page and its website to vet the "lore."
  • Check Holders (9:40 - 9:56): He opens the coin's "Holders" tab on GMGN and scans for any wallet holding more than his 7% limit. He then opens the "Bubble Maps" to check for suspicious connected wallets.
  • Check History (10:00 - 10:15): He uses the GMGN search to look up the ticker ("10B") to see if other versions of the coin were created and failed.
  • Check KOLs (10:16 - 10:45): He goes to "Display" > "KOLs" to see which known traders are in the coin. He argues that more KOLs can lead to more "shilling" and a "parabolic" move.

Practical Example: Trade Execution Strategy (Dips & DCA) (11:03 - 14:18)

  • Waiting for Entry (11:03 - 11:30): He sees that known traders are in "THE TEN." His strategy is to not buy immediately. Instead, he will "wait for them to get out," which will trigger their "copy traders" to sell, causing a dip. He will then "quickly get a position."
  • Setting TP/SL (11:51 - 12:45): He draws his plan on the chart:
    1. Enter on the dip.
    2. Set a limit order to sell 50% at 100% profit (2x).
    3. Set a limit order to sell more at 200% profit.
    4. Set a final limit order to sell the rest at 300% profit.
  • DCA Scenario (13:34 - 14:18): He presents an alternative strategy: Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA). If the coin is strong, has good lore, and KOLs are holding, instead of just setting one entry, you can "wait for dips and start DCA'ing," or "acquire a bit more supply" to "average down the cost."

Chapter 6: Final Checks & Conclusion (14:27 - 16:29)

  • (14:27 - 14:39): He emphasizes the importance of watching the "trenches" (new pair feed) because good coins are often "vamped" (copied) quickly.
  • (14:40 - 15:06): Always keep checking the coin's community, website, and social posts. If the dev deletes them or "fuds" the project, you need to "have the information beforehand" to "potentially quickly exit" and avoid a loss.

Practical Example: Coin Death & Revival (15:07 - 15:42)

  • The speaker shows a chart for "ZKSL (USD)," which "went to zero."
  • He notes that "sometimes... a coin dies," but later, "some other KOLs" or a "DEX gets paid," and the "coin picks back up."
  • He shows the ZKSL chart reviving and pumping, suggesting that even "dead" coins can be traded if they fit the requirements and show new life.

80k Trade Breakdown by Liam James Kay

Core Strategy: Finding Potential Coins (Tools & Filtering)

  • (2:11 - 2:43) Introduction to the primary tool: Axiom (axiom.trade). The "Pulse" tab shows newly created and progressing memecoins.
  • (2:44 - 4:12) Explanation of Axiom Pulse Columns:
    • New Pairs: Extremely high volume of new coins launching constantly, mostly "crap" or noise. Very risky.
    • Final Stretch: Coins approaching migration, still very volatile.
    • Migrated: Coins that have met certain criteria (e.g., reached ~$80k market cap on Pump.fun and migrated to Raydium). The speaker suggests focusing attention here as some initial filtering has occurred, though still very risky.
  • (4:12 - 5:06) Insight: The strategy focuses on filtering noise and identifying coins with potential after they have shown some initial traction (Migrated stage), rather than trying to gamble on brand new pairs.
  • (5:06 - 6:21) Practical Tip: Use Axiom's Alerts feature. Set an audio alert specifically for "Pair Migrating" to be notified when coins reach the 'Migrated' stage without having to constantly watch the screen.
  • (6:21 - 7:32) Practical Filtering (Axiom Pulse):
    • Use the filter settings on the Pulse tab.
    • Filter 1: Max Bundle %: Set to 30% (or lower). This filters out coins where a single entity might hold a large portion of the supply through multiple wallets via bundling, which increases rug pull risk.
    • Filter 2: Min Market Cap: Set to $70k. This helps focus on migrated coins that are holding their value post-migration and filters out immediate failures.
  • (7:32 - 9:10) Introduction to Axiom Discover -> Trending Tab:
    • This shows coins currently experiencing high volume and momentum (buying interest).
    • Practical Filtering (Axiom Trending): Use filters here too.
      • Timeframe: Set to 5m or 1m to see current hot coins.
      • Filter 1: Max Bundle %: Again, set to 30% or lower.
      • Filter 2: Min Volume: Set a minimum volume threshold (e.g., $30k in the last 5 minutes) to focus on coins with significant current activity.
  • (9:11 - 10:01) Practical Tool: Use external Discord Bots (like Alpha Bot in the speaker's "Trench Bulls" community) for real-time volume alerts. These alerts can prompt you to check a coin on Axiom Trending quickly.

Chapter 3: The ACID Test: Evaluating Potential

  • (10:29 - 12:54) The core 4-part framework for evaluating if a coin has potential:
    • A - Appeal (10:32): Does the coin have mass appeal? Is the name, ticker, and meme concept easily understandable, relatable, funny, or relevant to current narratives? Could it go viral beyond just crypto traders?
    • C - Community (11:17): Is there an active community forming? Check Twitter/X, Telegram. Are people engaged, posting memes, genuinely excited? Or is it just bots/shillers?
    • I - Interest (Volume/Momentum) (11:47): Is there real trading volume and momentum? Check Axiom Trending, look at the chart for buying pressure. Check "Global Fees Paid" on Axiom (higher is better, indicates real user activity).
    • D - Distribution (11:50): Is the token distribution clean? Check Axiom's Token Info panel:
      • Low % held by Dev? (Dev H.)
      • Low % held by Snipers? (Snipers H.)
      • Low % held by Insiders?
      • Low % held by Bundlers? (Bundlers)
      • Check Top Holders list for any single wallet holding too large a percentage.

Chapter 4: Practical Examples (Applying the ACID Test)

  • (12:55 - 17:02) Example 1: INDIA16Z (India Large Language Model)
    • Found: Migrated tab.
    • Appeal: Based on a news tweet about India launching AI models. Speaker questions if this has broad meme appeal.
    • Community: Linked X account seems news-related, not a typical meme community.
    • Interest: High MCAP ($1.2M+), significant Global Fees Paid ($11.8k) indicating real activity. Chart shows upward trend initially.
    • Distribution: Token Info panel looks clean (0% Dev, 0% Snipers, ~6% Bundlers, 1% Insiders). Top holders look okay.
    • Speaker's Verdict: Technically passes distribution/interest checks but skepticism on pure meme appeal. (Spoiler added: "I was correct" - implies it performed well initially but maybe not long-term meme run).
  • (17:03 - 17:58) Example 2: SLM (Small Language Model)
    • Found: Migrated/Trending.
    • Appeal: Taps into the AI narrative, potentially appealing.
    • Community: Assumed okay from earlier Discord alert mention.
    • Interest: High Global Fees Paid ($66.8k) relative to MCAP (~$560k) - very strong sign of real interest. Visible on Trending.
    • Distribution: Token Info looks clean (0% Dev/Snipers/Insiders, ~6.7% Bundlers).
    • Speaker's Verdict: Looks promising based on high real interest (fees paid) and clean distribution.
  • (17:59 - 19:49) Example 3: goodboy
    • Found: Trending tab.
    • Appeal: Simple dog meme (Golden Retriever), relatable name. Passes appeal check.
    • Community: Checks linked X/Twitter community (18:19). Notes active members posting memes and engaging (18:33-18:55). Passes community check.
    • Interest: On Trending, chart shows upward momentum. Global Fees Paid ($43.43) is okay.
    • Distribution: Token Info looks clean (0% Dev/Snipers/Insiders, 3.3% Bundlers).
    • Speaker's Verdict: Passes the ACID test well, particularly strong on appeal and community activity.
  • (19:50 - 21:15) Example 4: AD (Axiom Discounter?)
    • Found: Trending tab.
    • Appeal: Speaker seems unimpressed by the visual/concept.
    • Community: Not checked, likely weak/non-existent.
    • Interest: Very low MCAP (~$13k), low Global Fees Paid ($38), chart looks like a quick pump and dump. Fails interest check.
    • Distribution: Not checked in detail, but other factors are red flags.
    • Speaker's Verdict: Quickly dismissed as likely junk/scam.
  • (21:16 - 23:01) Example 5: ORANGE (The Orange Cat)
    • Found: (Implied) Trending/Established Coin.
    • Appeal: Cat meme, simple. Good appeal.
    • Community: (Implied) Likely established given MCAP.
    • Interest: High MCAP ($3.2M), very high Global Fees Paid ($154k). Strong interest.
    • Distribution: (Implied) Okay.
    • Speaker's Verdict: Used as an example of a successful coin to discuss psychology.
  • (24:35 - 27:42) Example 6: ONECOIN (One coin to rule them all)
    • Found: Trending tab.
    • Appeal: Based on an Elon Musk tweet/LOTR reference. BUT, speaker checks the tweet and finds it's from 2021 (26:16). This significantly weakens the appeal.
    • Community: X account is new, few followers (464). Weak community check.
    • Interest: Recent pump on the chart, but Global Fees Paid ($22.9k) is relatively low for the ~$180k MCAP.
    • Distribution: Assumed okay.
    • Speaker's Verdict: Initially tempted by Musk link, but the old tweet + low fees make him skeptical. (Spoiler added: "I was correct" - implying it failed to run further). Key Insight: Verify the source/recency of narratives.

Chapter 5: Trading Psychology & Execution

  • (23:02 - 23:26) Critical Insight (Cutting Losses): Most traders fail because they hold onto losing coins too long, hoping they will recover. You MUST cut losses quickly if a trade goes against you, even if you believe in the coin. Don't let small losses turn into huge ones. Refers to the book "Best Loser Wins".
  • (23:27 - 24:34) Critical Insight (Letting Winners Run): The other side of the coin - traders often take profits too early on winning trades out of fear, missing out on massive potential gains (10x, 100x).
  • (23:54 - 24:12) Practical Tip: Once a trade is significantly in profit, set a stop-loss order just below your entry point or at a point that locks in some profit. Then, try to step away and let it run without constantly watching the chart and being tempted to sell too soon. This helps manage emotion.
  • (General throughout examples) Taking profit is important, but the strategy implies aiming for larger multiples rather than quick scalps. Understanding market milestones (e.g., $200k, $500k, $1M MCAP) where people often take profits can help inform decisions, but letting winners run past these points (if the ACID test still holds true) is key to large gains.

Video 1: Trading Course Memecoins 101 By James Wang

Main Chapter 1

Chapter 1: Introduction: The "System" vs. The "Casino" (00:00 - 01:09)

  • Key Insight: The speaker, James Wang, asserts that most people treat memecoin trading like a casino (00:06). He contrasts this with his "system" for finding asymmetric opportunities (00:37).
  • Key Insight: He claims this system helped him turn $500 into over $11 million in three years and that he will teach this framework (00:54).

Chapter 2: Part 1 - Tool Demo: Setting Up the Axiom Platform (01:09 - 04:31)

This section provides a practical walkthrough of the Axiom Pro trading platform.

  • Key Insight: To trade effectively, you need "clarity, precision, and dominance," which he argues is not possible by just "clicking buttons on an iPhone" (01:13).
  • Key Insight: The "Pulse" feature (01:30) is a real-time feed of newly launched coin pairs, categorized by "New Pairs," "Final Stretch," and "Migrated."
  • Practical Example 1 (Filtering New Pairs): The speaker demonstrates how to filter the "Pulse" feed to reduce noise and find quality launches (01:58).
    • He selects specific protocols he wants to watch (e.g., Pump.fun, Bonk, Moonshot) (02:02).
    • He sets a minimum market cap of $13,000 (02:14). He states this is crucial to "filter out a lot of the trash that is being deployed."
  • Key Insight: He explains key data points to analyze on new coins (02:35):
    • Dev Supply / Insider Holding / Sniper Holding: These are generally red flags indicating non-public allocation. He flags "Insider Holders" (airdropped tokens) and "Sniper Holding" (first-block transactions) as "pretty big red flags" (04:15).
    • Bundled Supply: This means multiple wallets bought in the same block (02:48). He warns that while not always bad (it could be hype), a very high percentage (e.g., >50%) is a major red flag (03:10).
  • Practical Example 2 (Wallet Due Diligence): The speaker analyzes a specific coin called "Brewski" (03:50).
    • He clicks on the deployer wallet to check its history.
    • He discovers the deployer has launched 409 tokens (03:53).
    • He identifies these as "recycled" or "redeployed," immediately flagging the coin as high risk and likely a rug pull (03:59).

Chapter 3: Part 2 - Tool Demo: Tracking Wallets & Twitter (04:32 - 06:22)

This section focuses on using the "Tracker" features for intelligence gathering.

  • Key Insight: The "Tracker" section is one of the most powerful features, allowing users to monitor specific wallets and Twitter (X) accounts for real-time alerts (04:32).
  • Practical Example 3 (Importing Twitter Alerts): The speaker demonstrates how to import a pre-compiled JSON list of influential Twitter accounts into the "Twitter Alerts" feature (04:52 - 05:05). This provides immediate notifications when those accounts tweet, which can move markets.
  • Practical Example 4 (Importing Wallet Lists): He repeats the process for the "Wallet Manager," importing a list of known "smart money" crypto wallets to track all their buy and sell transactions (05:12 - 05:22).
  • Key Insight: A core strategy is to use the "Pulse" (new coins) and "Twitter Tracker" (narrative) features in tandem to catch new trends as they emerge (05:26).
  • Practical Example 5 (Case Study: $BIGBALLS Coin): The speaker provides a concrete example of this system in action (05:55).
    • Signal: His "Twitter monitor" alerted him that Elon Musk was spamming the "Big Balls" meme (06:00).
    • Action: He checked the coin, saw it was at a $1M market cap, and bought in.
    • Result: He claims to have made over $300,000 from this play (05:46). He shows a PNL (Profit and Loss) screenshot from his Discord for "BIGBALLS" showing a +791.8% gain (06:08).

Chapter 4: Strategy: "Reverse Engineer, Don't Copy" (06:23 - 08:05)

This chapter uses a Miro board to explain the philosophy behind wallet tracking.

  • Core Principle: "Axiom Wallet Tracking — Reverse Engineer, Don't Copy" (06:23).
  • Key Insight: The purpose of wallet tracking is to track attention and narrative, not to blindly mirror another trader's moves (06:34).
  • Key "Things to Remember":
    • "Don't Copy Trade" (06:34): You must always do your own due diligence (DD) to ensure the coin is solid.
    • "Avoid Herd FOMO" (06:35): The speaker makes a counter-intuitive point: he sells when he sees heavy copy-trader wallets buying, as it often signals the top is in.
  • The 4-Step Reverse-Engineering Process:
    1. Observe Buys & Timing (07:01, 07:24): See what wallets are buying and when. Look for consistent early entries.
    2. Track Live PNL (07:28): See how much they are up or down. Filter out lucky one-off wins to find traders who are consistently profitable.
    3. Study Portfolio Behavior (07:28): Do they scale into winners? Do they dump at the first candle? Do they rotate profits well between plays?
    4. Wallets That Print (07:48): Only follow high-performing, consistent wallets. The goal is to learn their patterns, not just mimic their trades.

Chapter 5: Part 3 - Tool Demo: Trading Presets & Bankroll Management (08:06 - 10:50)

This section returns to the Axiom tool to demonstrate trade execution and risk management.

  • Key Insight: Speed is critical. You must have trading presets ready before an opportunity arises so you can act instantly (09:18).
  • Practical Example 6 (Setting Trading Presets): The speaker shows his personal "Buy/Sell Settings" for memecoins (08:16).
    • Slippage: Set very high, between 30% and 50% (09:00), to ensure the transaction is filled in a highly volatile market.
    • Priority Fee & Bribe: Set high (e.g., 0.03 - 0.05 SOL) (09:05) to get the transaction included in the block faster than other traders.
    • MEV Mode: Set to "Secure" (09:12) to prevent front-running.
  • Strategy & Practical Example 7 (Bankroll Management):
    • Only deposit what you are prepared to lose (10:03).
    • He personally trades in 3-5 SOL increments for his high-conviction plays (10:05). He suggests 1 SOL for others.
    • Treasury System (10:15): He uses a "trenching wallet" (his active trading wallet) and a separate "treasury wallet." Anytime his trading wallet goes over 100 SOL, he transfers the excess profits to his treasury. This physically limits his risk and protects his profits from a single bad trade.
  • Key Insight: The Axiom platform offers "rebates" (10:15), paying users back a portion of fees on their trading volume.

Chapter 6: Strategy: The "Invisible Edge" - Environment & Community (10:51 - 13:45)

This chapter explains the importance of trading within a group.

  • Core Principle: "The Invisible Edge — Environment & Community" (10:51).
  • Key Insight: "You can't learn to trade in solitude... you'll master it in the presence of giants." (10:55). He calls trying to trade memecoins solo a "death sentence" (11:05).
  • Key Insight: The "Winning Strategy" is "Not doing it alone." (11:34).
  • Why? "Information moves faster than the chain. Capital, attention, and conviction are crowdsourced in real time." (11:36).
  • "Why Community is the Real Edge" (12:20):
    • He describes a "Decentralized Alpha Engine" (13:02): Multiple people covering different data streams equals more opportunities.
    • Practical Example 8 (Team Roles): He outlines how an effective group works (12:26 - 12:50):
      • One person acts as a "Wallet Watcher" (monitoring smart money buys/sells).
      • One person acts as a "New Launch Tracker" (watching Axiom Pulse).
      • One person acts as a "Twitter Keyword Scanner" (surfacing new narratives and trends).
      • One person acts as a "Deployer Watcher" (tracking patterns from successful coin launchers).
  • Key Insight: "Collective Edge" (13:09): He states that scaling to 6-7 figures often comes from this "network + collaboration."

Chapter 7: Strategy: "The Telegram Trap" & Conclusion (13:46 - 15:11)

The final section warns against common pitfalls and contrasts them with a healthy trading environment.

  • Key Insight: The speaker warns against "90% of 'free alpha' on Telegram," calling it a "bait built to farm you, not to help you." (13:52).
  • Practical Example 9 (The Telegram Trap): He outlines the common scam (14:04):
    1. An admin launches a coin.
    2. The admin buys 20%+ of the supply before launch.
    3. They shill it to their group ("guys this will moon!").
    4. The group members ("you") ape in.
    5. The admin "exits" by dumping their cheap bags on the new buyers, using them as exit liquidity.
  • Key Insight: This trap provides no real education, no transparency, and no feedback loop, resulting in losses ("Red PnL") (14:35).
  • Key Insight: A "right environment" (he shows his Discord at 14:49) consists of experienced traders sharing their own research and providing "clear breakdowns" for why they are entering a trade, which allows for collaboration, learning, and genuine alpha.

Main Chapter 2

Chapter 1: Core Philosophy & Winning Strategy (00:00 - 02:20)

This section outlines the foundational mindset required for memecoin trading, contrasting the winning approach with why most people fail.

Key Insights:

  • The Advantage (00:09): The winning "setup" is about having an edge, speed, and a system. While others are scrambling, a systematic trader is already in a position, managing it, and scanning for the next opportunity.
  • Memecoin Nature (00:21): Memecoins are not jokes; they are "velocity-driven attention vehicles." Their value is based on culture, timing, and narrative friction. They offer "uniquely asymmetric with uncapped upside" and are a reflection of "social psychology."
  • Why Memecoins Work for the "Underdog" (00:41):
    • Narrative Liquidity: If you are right early, capital will follow you.
    • Community Scale: Strong memes build "fast-growing echo chambers."
    • Execution Velocity: Skill allows you to "front-run inefficiency" in the market.
  • Tactical Speculation (01:06): This is not traditional investing. It's described as "digital jiu-jitsu"—using the market's own weight against it. It rewards fast execution, fractal memory (recognizing patterns), and emotional detachment.
  • Volatility (01:22): Volatility is "the price you pay for asymmetric returns." The presenter notes that if you can't emotionally handle the swings, you are trading the wrong asset class.
  • Why Most People Lose (01:42):
    • They are "overleveraged emotionally," not just with capital.
    • They chase hype instead of building true conviction.
    • They lack consistency in journaling and position sizing.

Chapter 2: Understanding Narratives & Price Drivers (02:20 - 07:50)

This chapter details what actually moves the price of a memecoin, emphasizing that traditional financial metrics are irrelevant.

Key Insights:

  • What Actually Drives Price (02:30): Price is not driven by traditional technical analysis like RSI or MACD. It is driven by a combination of Attention, Narrative, Belief, and Culture.
  • The Core Principle (02:40): "Stop Trading Coins. Start Trading Conviction."
  • The Laboratory (02:48): To find opportunities, the presenter's method involves:
    • Using a tool called Axiom (shown later) to monitor the market.
    • Curating a high-quality Twitter (X) profile to follow the right people.
    • Actively hunting for high-quality narratives.
  • What is a Narrative? (02:54): A narrative is "a meme with market power." It's the "psychological scaffolding people use to justify risk." In crypto, a narrative equals "momentum with meaning" and "doesn't need to be true – only believable."
  • Memecoins as Belief Systems (03:00): Belief systems move money faster than fundamental analysis ever could.
  • Validating a Narrative (03:22): You must ask key questions to build conviction:
    • What's the story behind the coin?
    • What meme/friend was it built around?
    • Is it gaining attention now or likely to soon?
    • Is it unique or a copy?
    • Does it fit in the current "meta" (the overarching hot narrative, e.g., AI)?
  • Research Sources (04:05): To answer the validation questions, use:
    • Axiom (crypto data tool)
    • The coin's Twitter (X) profile (check posts, followers, and who they are following)
    • Website
    • Telegram/Discord
    • GitHub (if it's a utility-based coin)
  • Future Catalysts (04:28): Think about the future potential. Ask: "If MC [Market Cap] is $10M → why would someone buy at $100M?" Look for specific events or news that could spark the next move.
  • Alpha vs. Beta Plays (06:21):
    • Alpha Plays: The main coin of a narrative (the "focal point of meta"). It has the most mindshare and liquidity.
    • Beta Plays: These are "derivatives/spin-offs of the alpha." They are "cope plays" with the potential to reach ~10% of the alpha's market cap.

Practical Examples in this Chapter:

  • Political Coin ($TRUMP) (04:08, 05:13): The presenter shows a Google search for "yo is trumpcoin still alive" as an example of research. He then switches to DEX Screener to show the $TRUMP coin chart. He points out its massive initial spike to $65 (05:16) and subsequent "bleed" down to $8 (05:22) as attention and the narrative (the election) faded. This illustrates a "short-term hype" coin.
  • Personal Anecdote (07:25): The presenter mentions, "I mean, me personally, I made $4,000,000 off of Trump," to validate the power of trading an "Alpha Play" narrative.
  • AI Meta Coin ($SWF) (06:00): He briefly shows the chart for $SWF, another coin that saw a massive spike and decline, illustrating a narrative cycle.

Chapter 3: The Alpha Filter (A 3-Part System) (07:50 - 12:35)

This section introduces the presenter's core trading system, "The Alpha Filter," which is a 3-step process to find high-conviction trades.

Key Insights:

  • Core Motto (08:16): "We don't predict. We filter."
  • Part 1: Market Condition Check (08:38):
    • First, ask: "Is now a good time to be aggressive?"
    • If YES, look for "green lights":
      1. High volume across new coin launches.
      2. New coins are "printing" (launching) every 3-4 hours.
      3. "Sentiment-check" coins (like $BONK, $PUMP) are showing strength.
    • Then, look for the "leading narrative" (e.g., AI meta, Dog coins) and see if other "high-performing" coins in that same theme are also rising.
    • If NO (market is slow), you "Sit out / Only A+ conviction plays."
    • The key: "Most people lose because they trade every day. We win because we trade when it's time." (10:19)
  • Part 2: Evaluate Narrative (10:25): This is a deeper dive, recapping the questions from Chapter 2 to determine the quality of the narrative's attention.
    1. How many people will see it? (Audience size)
    2. How will people react? (Resonance)
    3. What is the ceiling of attention? (Valuation)
    4. How long will this attention last? (Durability)
  • Part 3: Inefficiency Check (11:31): This is where you find your edge.
    • Ask: "Has CT [Crypto Twitter] caught onto this yet?" or "Am I late to the move?"
    • If YES → "Pass on the trade. Wait for a new narrative."
    • If NO → This is a "Potential inefficiency found."
    • To confirm the inefficiency, look for:
      • Founder/Deployer: Are they connected to previous successful "runners"?
      • Narrative Echo: Are people rotating from a winning coin (e.g., $WIF) to a "beta" coin in the same category (e.g., other dog coins)?
      • Rotation Signal: Is an AI coin doing huge numbers? What similar AI coins haven't reacted yet?
    • The goal: "Narratives are best to buy into when the fundamentals are there, but it's not crowded." (11:53)
    • This entire 3-step process "removes the noise and helps you build conviction." (12:22)

Practical Examples in this Chapter:

  • Market Condition Check ($LAUNCH) (09:58): The presenter goes to DEX Screener to show the $LAUNCH coin. He identifies it as part of the "AI narrative." Because it and other AI coins were performing well, this signaled a "YES" for the "Market Condition Check," meaning it was a good time to be aggressive in that narrative.

Chapter 4: Practical Demonstration of the Alpha Filter ($VIDEO) (12:36 - 16:53)

This is a full, step-by-step case study of how the presenter used the Alpha Filter to execute a highly profitable trade on a coin called $VIDEO.

Practical Application:

  • Tool Usage (12:51): The presenter shows the Axiom dashboard, which he uses to "hunt for high-quality narratives." It shows surging coins, new DEX pairs, and live pump data.

  • The Signal (13:06): He shows a tweet from "Willjcrypto" about a coin called $VIDEO (by Drakula), which was part of a story about college students turning $300 into $500K. This was the initial spark.

  • Applying the Alpha Filter:

    • Step 1: Market Condition Check (13:21):

      • Leading Narrative: The market was in a hot "AI meta," led by the alpha coin $GOAT. (He shows the $GOAT and $ZEROBRO charts on DEX Screener as proof (13:38)).
      • Market Vibe: Volume was "extremely good" after a recent retrace.
      • Conclusion: The environment was right for an AI-related coin. $VIDEO was an "ideal coin to look for."
    • Step 2: Narrative Valuation Check (14:11):

      • Backings? "Yes." The presenter goes to X (Twitter) and shows that the Drakula app (related to $VIDEO) is "followed by Paradigm" (15:09), a massive, top-tier crypto investment firm. This is the "insane backing."
      • Attention? "Yes." The backing from Paradigm and the fact it was a real, functional app would "draw eyes."
      • Use Case? "Yes." The "devs are building on the app."
    • Step 3: Identifying Inefficiency (15:15):

      • Inefficiency Found: The coin was at an "Only ~$30k market cap."
      • Conviction: This "did not make sense when similar coins [backed by VCs] were at millions."
      • Action: "Bought in. Held for days."
      • The Result (15:36): The presenter shows multiple screenshots and a screen recording from his phone (16:08) of his PHOTON wallet. The gains show "+6475.85%". Other screenshots show wallet values of $85,445 (16:19) and other large profits, all culminating in a "$500,000 Day" from this single, systematic trade.

Main Chapter 3

The video outlines a 3-step framework for executing a successful memecoin trade, using the "$TRUMP" coin as a real-world case study. The presenter claims this single trade netted over $7 million.

Chapter 1: Step 1: Market Condition Check (00:09 - 00:32)

This step involves assessing the overall market sentiment to determine the viability of high-risk trades.

  • Key Insight (00:11): Always begin by checking the broader market conditions. The example given is that "Solana was near all-time highs" and there was "tons of volume in new pairs."
  • Key Insight (00:16): These positive indicators suggested that "Memecoins were poised to explode."
  • Actionable Tip (00:19): A strong market (a "risk-on" environment) gives a trader permission to "be much more risk-on with my capital."
  • Actionable Tip (00:26): In the absence of a "solid meta" (a dominant trend), the primary strategy should be to "watch for strong narratives."

Chapter 2: Step 2: Narrative Valuation Check (00:32 - 01:36)

This step is about evaluating the story and "mindshare" of a specific coin to determine its potential. The presenter calls "unparalleled influence" the "ultimate edge" (00:38).

  • Key Insight (00:41): Identify the core narrative. For $TRUMP, it was the "most popular man in the world launching a coin."
  • Actionable Tip (00:46): Ask three key questions to value the narrative:
    1. "Will everyone see it?" (Assessing reach). The answer for $TRUMP was "Yes, due to his influence."
    2. "Will people buy?" (Assessing conversion). The answer was "Yes, his influence incites action."
    3. "How high is the ceiling?" (Assessing profit potential).
  • Key Insight (01:12): To determine the "ceiling," the presenter benchmarked $TRUMP against the largest memecoin on the chain at the time ($WIF) and concluded there was a "High chance of overtaking $WIF."
  • Actionable Tip (Risk Management) (01:17): A "Risk Note" on the slide states, "Longevity depends on sustained mention/minds hare." This means the trade is only viable as long as the person or narrative at its core remains in the public eye.

Chapter 3: Step 3: Identifying Inefficiency (01:36 - 02:17)

This is the core of the trade: finding an asset whose price does not reflect its true narrative value (mindshare).

  • Key Strategy (01:39): The goal is "Finding a multi-billion dollar narrative at a discount."
  • Actionable Tip (Comparative Valuation) (01:45): The presenter justified the "multi-billion" potential by observing that other, weaker narratives (like AI coins) were already valued in the billions.
  • Key Insight (02:05): The "inefficiency" was identified: a coin with the narrative strength of Donald Trump was "undervalued at $500 million" and, in the presenter's view, should "go to multiple billions."
  • Key Insight (02:00): The presenter acknowledges the high-risk nature of the trade, noting "we weren't too sure if it was real, but it was a gamble worth taking."

Chapter 4: Core Thesis: Mindshare is the New Market Cap (02:17 - 02:43)

The video concludes with the central philosophy underpinning the entire strategy.

  • Core Concept (02:18): "Mindshare is the New Market Cap."
  • Key Insight (02:20): "Attention is the most scarce resource. Not money. Not tokens. Attention." The strategy is fundamentally about trading attention.
  • Actionable Framework (02:28): The presenter provides a 3-part process for trading attention:
    1. "Understand attention before the masses."
    2. "Trade attention before it peaks."
    3. "Exit attention before it dies."

Practical Example: $TRUMP Real Trade Walkthrough

The video's main example is a detailed breakdown of the $TRUMP memecoin trade:

  • Context: The trade was initiated during a "risk-on" market where Solana was performing strongly and memecoins were gaining momentum (00:12).
  • Narrative: The coin was associated with Donald Trump, who the presenter identifies as having "unparalleled influence" (00:38). The valuation was based on the idea that his global recognition would drive massive visibility (00:48) and buying action (01:04).
  • Signal: The coin was first identified when it "appeared on my Twitter tracker" and was also seen on "Truth Social" (01:57).
  • Entry (The Inefficiency): The team entered the trade when the coin was at an approximately $500 million market cap (01:54). They believed this was "undervalued" (02:08) because its "multi-billion dollar narrative" was being sold at a "discount" (01:39).
  • Profit Target (The Ceiling): The potential profit was benchmarked against the top memecoin on Solana, $WIF, with the presenter believing $TRUMP could surpass its market cap (01:12).
  • Result: The presenter claims this strategy of identifying undervalued "mindshare" and narrative strength led to a profit of "over $7 million" (00:06).

Main Chapter 4

Introduction & What is a Rug?

  • (0:02) Key Mindset: You don't "blow up" from bad trades; you blow up from bad habits.
  • (0:07) The Root of Detection: The primary skill is separating good narratives from bad ones, as a single rug can "undo weeks of gains."
  • (0:29) Core Definition of a Rug: It's not just liquidity being pulled. A rug is "any scenario where the system was designed against you from the beginning."
  • (0:37) Types of Rugs:
    • Soft Rug: The developer (dev) vanishes, there's no support, and the chart dies.
    • Hard Rug: The liquidity pool (LP) is pulled instantly, and all funds are gone.
    • Slow Bleed: Early insiders gradually dump their tokens on new buyers, causing you to exit in the red.

The Analysis Fork: Spotting Rugs

This section is broken into two parts: social analysis and on-chain analysis.

1. Social Rug Detection

  • (1:01) Social Red Flags:
    • Anonymous Dev: This is noted as primarily mattering for "tech coins."
    • Low-Effort or Stolen Memes: Check if the memes or branding are unoriginal.
    • No Real X (Twitter) Presence, Just Bots: The engagement looks fake or automated.
    • Repetitive Influencer Engagement Farming: Seeing the same influencers posting generic, copy-pasted replies or shills.
  • (1:44) Actionable Tips (Social):
    • Run a reverse image search on the project's memes and profile pictures (PFPs) to check for originality.
    • Check the developer's account history, specifically its age and past posts.
  • (1:52) Key Insight: A real community is organic, and its memes will evolve. A rug's memes and community feel static and forced.

Practical Example: Social Red Flag (1:20 - 1:41)

  • The presenter shows an X (Twitter) profile (blood) as an example of "repetitive influencer engagement farming."
  • He scrolls through the feed, pointing out numerous repetitive "$500 GIVEAWAY" posts, generic "GM" posts with the same art, and "shilling a ton of projects."
  • He describes this as "copy and pasta replies," indicating the influencer has no real conviction and is just farming engagement, which is a major red flag for the projects they promote.

2. On-Chain Rug Detection

  • (1:59) Key On-Chain Questions:
    • Holders Distribution: Is the distribution "egregious?" (e.g., a few wallets hold a massive percentage of the supply).
    • Deployer: Is the deployer a "serial rugger?" (Have they launched many other failed or rugged coins?).
  • (2:12) Key Tool: Use a tool like Axiom to check the deployer's history and the wallets of other holders.
  • (2:38) Warning: "If you don't check these, you're not a trader—you're exit liquidity."

Practical Example: On-Chain Analysis with Axiom (2:13 - 2:37)

The presenter demonstrates how to use the Axiom tool to perform on-chain checks:

  1. (Checking Holder Distribution (2:24)):
    • He selects a coin (GENTING) and navigates to the "Top Holders" tab.
    • He points out that the top 10 holders own 73% of the supply, which he calls an "egregious bundle holding" and a clear red flag.
  2. (Checking Deployer History (2:30)):
    • He selects another coin (AGOK) and clicks on the "Dev Tokens (19)" tab.
    • This instantly reveals that the same deployer has launched 19 other coins in the past.
    • This is a practical way to identify a "serial rugger" and avoid the coin.

Emotional Rugs: The Silent Killer

  • (02:43) Core Concept: "Most rugs are internal." The presenter states, "The truth is, you rugged yourself."
  • (02:54) How Traders Actually Blow Up:
    • Overleveraging on a single coin.
    • Chasing plays with no filter (FOMO).
    • Going all-in because of a "Fear of Missing Out."
  • (03:15) The Solution to Emotional Rugs:
    • Build Habits: Stick to your system.
    • Use Presets: Automate your buy/sell size. The presenter suggests using tools like Axiom to set default buy sizes or to Dollar-Cost Average (DCA) into a position.
    • Set Exits On-Chain: Pre-determine your stop-loss and take-profit levels before you enter the trade.

Risk Management and Psychology

  • (03:54) Key Mindset: This part of trading isn't about "alpha" (finding the best plays); it's about "survival," which is where 99% of traders fail.
  • (03:57) Actionable Strategy: The 3-Wallet System
    • Main Wallet (Max 50 SOL): Only used for executing your "top conviction plays." No "exploratory buys" from this wallet.
    • Test Wallet (1-3 SOL): Used "for sniffing new coins." This is your experimentation wallet for "fast in/out, no attachments" trades.
    • Vault Wallet (Cold Storage): Used to "rotate profits out of main here." You should never reuse keys or addresses associated with this wallet.
  • (04:31) Wallet Tips:
    • Use a hardware wallet (like a Ledger or Trezor) for your Vault Wallet.
    • Split your risk by coin type (e.g., memes vs. perpetuals vs. stablecoin yield).
  • (04:42) Warning: "The fastest way to blow your port is believing you are the exception to getting rugged."

Core Pillars of Risk & Sizing

  • (05:13) Key Insight: "The market doesn't take your money. Your behavior gives it away."
  • (05:17) The Core Pillars of Risk:
    • Capital preservation always comes before capital multiplication.
    • A good exit is always better than a perfect entry.
    • Your trading "edge" is meaningless if you cannot execute it under stress.
  • (05:44) Actionable Strategy: Risk Sizing Framework
    • 1-2% (of portfolio): For "speculative snipes" (like new coin launches).
    • 5-7%: For "rotational setups."
    • 10-15% MAX: For "high-conviction meta plays."

Emotional Tilt & Daily Rituals

  • (05:56) Key Insight: "If you bet like you're trying to impress a screenshot, you're already lost."
  • (06:00) The 4 Types of Emotional Tilt:
    • Revenge Tilt: Entering a trade again out of ego, not because you have an edge.
    • Desperation Tilt: Risking more because you feel a deadline or guilt.
    • Validation Tilt: Trying to prove to others that you were right.
    • Hope Tilt: Ignoring red flags because you are "married to a position."
  • (06:38) Actionable Strategy: Daily Rituals to Avoid Tilt
    • Morning: 10-minute market review and journaling.
    • Mid-day: Take a walk or a "dopamine reset" (no screens).
    • Post-trade: Keep a reflection log (documenting your entry, exit, mistake, and outcome).
  • (07:24) Final Mindset: "You are not a trader. You are a risk-controlled algorithm in human form. Act like it."

Practical Example: Journaling (07:09 - 07:22)

  • The presenter shows his personal Discord server, where he and others post "journal entries."
  • He scrolls through a detailed entry he wrote, reflecting on his psychology, his trades, and his learnings. This is a real-world application of the "reflection log" and "journaling" he advises.

Trading Course Memecoin Psychology By Alex Choi

Chapter 1: The Problem: Isolated Thinking (00:42 - 02:45)

This section identifies the primary psychological mistake that causes traders to fail.

  • Key Insight (00:42): Most traders are "stuck in isolated thinking." They become one-dimensional and get obsessed with a single tactic (e.g., "just trade new pairs") without seeing the bigger picture.
  • Key Insight (01:03): The market is not static. Contexts, narratives, and liquidity are constantly shifting. A strategy that works one month may be a losing strategy the next.
  • Actionable Tip (01:14): You must be willing to adapt your mindset and strategies as the market evolves. If you don't, you'll be left behind.

Practical Example: The Death of the "New Pairs" Narrative

  • Timestamp: 01:34
  • Description: The speaker shows a DeFi Llama chart of on-chain volume on Solana. He points out that volume is down almost 90% from its peak.
  • Application: This data is concrete proof that the market context has changed. The "mania" phase of indiscriminately buying any new coin is over because the liquidity has dried up. He states that trying to trade new pairs in this environment (at the time of the video) is "bleeding money" and a "terrible" strategy. This illustrates why "isolated thinking" (sticking to the "new pairs" tactic) fails.

Chapter 2: The Mindset Shift: Thinking in Context (02:46 - 03:48)

This chapter provides the solution to "isolated thinking."

  • Key Insight (02:50): "No trade exists in isolation." Every trade's potential is determined by external factors.
  • Actionable Strategy (03:01): The core mindset shift is to stop asking, "Is this a good coin?"
  • Actionable Strategy (03:02): Instead, you must ask, "What are the outside factors that make this a trade with asymmetric upside?" Your goal is not to find "good coins" but to find trades where the potential reward heavily outweighs the risk due to the surrounding context.

Chapter 3: The Context Checklist (03:49 - 07:56)

This is the video's primary actionable framework—a 3-step checklist to run before making any trade.

  • 1. Macro Context (03:52, 05:05):

    • Tip: Analyze the high-level market environment. Is Bitcoin stable and trending up? What is the current on-chain volume?
    • Application (05:35): If volume is low and coins are bleeding, the advantage is in established coins with "stronger floors" (utility or strong communities). If volume is high and Bitcoin is up (a "green day"), there is an advantage in trading higher-risk new coins.
  • 2. Narrative Context (03:57, 06:18):

    • Tip: Identify the current leading narratives. Where is the market's attention focused?
    • Strategy (04:02, 06:29): Understand the Narrative Cycle:
      • Ignition: The discovery phase, where people are speculating if the narrative has potential.
      • Mania: The peak, where everyone wants in, and copycats appear.
      • Exhaustion: The narrative is oversaturated, and hype is dying.
    • Tip (04:06): You must identify where in this cycle a coin's narrative is. The "edge" (asymmetric upside) is found in the Ignition phase, not the Exhaustion phase.
    • Practical Example (06:35): The speaker uses the "Internet Capital Markets" (e.g., Launchcoin) narrative as an example.
      • Ignition was the initial launch and speculation.
      • Mania was when it "ripped to 300 million," and many copycats launched.
      • Exhaustion is the current phase (at the time of the video), where the market is oversaturated with similar projects.
  • 3. Personal Context (04:13, 07:19):

    • Tip: Ask, "What does this trade mean for me?"
    • Strategy (07:19): A trade that is objectively good may be bad for you based on your portfolio size and goals.
    • Practical Example (07:23): He uses Bitcoin. Objectively, it's a good long-term asset. However, for a trader with a small $10,000 portfolio, locking up that capital for a potential 10% gain in a year is a bad personal trade. That capital could be better deployed on trades with higher (though riskier) asymmetric upside to grow the small portfolio faster.

Chapter 4: Practical Application: "Where Are We Right Now?" (07:57 - 10:03)

The speaker applies his 3-step checklist to the market conditions at the time of the video to show how to find an edge.

  • Macro Analysis (08:00): Liquidity is "much tighter," and Bitcoin dominance is high. This confirms that capital is not flowing to random, new memecoins. The market is "way more selective."
  • Narrative Analysis (08:18): The "new coin" narrative is in the "Exhaustion" phase. The current, active narrative is "utility" in both new and established coins.
  • Personal Analysis (09:32): This specific market environment "demands patience." He advises that for most traders, especially those with smaller sizes, more time should be spent on research and honing skills rather than actively trading.
  • The "Edge" in This Market (08:49): The new asymmetric opportunity comes from "simply processing information faster than the next guy."

Practical Example: Finding the New Edge

  • Timestamp: 09:09
  • Description: The speaker shows Dex Screener charts for "SPARK" and "AOL" (America Online).
  • Application: He points out that even in a "dead" market for new coins, these are "still getting runners" and hitting multi-million dollar market caps. The reason is that they have "strong narratives and some kind of structure." The "edge" is to find public information (e.g., who is backing the coin, what is the utility) before the rest of the market does. This is what "processing information faster" means in practice. You can no longer buy randomly; you must research to find the few quality projects that have a real narrative.

Trading memecoins on Axiom General Course

Introduction & Axiom Overview (0:00 - 2:07)

  • Key Insight: The speaker claims significant profits from memecoins ($2.1M at 19) by focusing on quality over quantity, enabled by using the right tools (0:04 - 0:10).
  • Tool Focus: Axiom Pro is presented as the primary tool used (0:18).
  • Axiom Benefits Highlighted:
    • Completely Free (0:19)
    • Lightning Fast (0:20)
    • Feature-Packed (0:21 - 0:23)
  • Video Goals: The video aims to teach how to use Axiom effectively in 2025, including finding quality coins, filtering, tracking wallets, avoiding rugs, and tracking Twitter (0:29 - 0:39).
  • Platform Description: Axiom is an all-in-one trading platform specifically for Solana memecoins, offering real-time tracking, Twitter/wallet tracking, bundle analysis, fee refunds, and perpetuals trading (0:52 - 1:07).
  • Setup Tip: Use the speaker's referral link (/fortune) during signup for a 20% fee discount (1:07 - 1:48).
    • Practical Application: The video shows the signup process via Phantom wallet connection (1:34 - 1:59) and emphasizes saving the recovery key (1:49 - 1:58).
  • Initial Dashboard: Briefly introduces the "Discover" (trending/surging coins) and "Pulse" (newly listed pairs) tabs (2:00 - 2:07).

Pulse Tab Analysis & Filtering Strategies (2:07 - 5:58)

  • Pulse Tab Structure:
    • New Pairs (Left Column): Real-time feed of every new token (2:09 - 2:15).
    • Final Stretch (Middle Column): Tokens approaching "migration" (reaching a specific market cap threshold to move to a different liquidity pool) (2:15 - 2:20).
    • Migrated (Right Column): Tokens that have successfully migrated (2:20 - 2:23).
  • Key Insight: 99% of coins appearing are "garbage" and will lose money; filtering is crucial (2:23 - 2:26).
  • Strategy 1 (Hot Market Conditions):
    • Condition: Market is hot, many coins are migrating frequently.
    • Action: Focus on the "New Pairs" column. Set a minimum market cap filter of $11,000 to remove immediate low-quality noise while still allowing for very early entries (3:30 - 3:38).
    • Practical Application: The speaker demonstrates opening the filters (P2, P3 section) and setting the "Min Market Cap" under "Metrics" (3:30 - 3:38).
  • Strategy 2 (Cooler Market Conditions / Standard Practice):
    • Condition: Market is cooler, fewer migrations, or general risk-off.
    • Action: Restrict focus entirely to the "Migrated" column (no filters needed here initially). This naturally filters for coins that have already shown some traction and holder interest (3:39 - 4:10).
    • Rationale: Migrated coins generally have stronger narratives/attention, reducing the pool of coins to analyze daily.
  • Understanding Coin Icons (Practical Knowledge): Demonstrated using the "seraph" coin (6:58 - 9:34).
    • Blue Person: Links to the associated Twitter profile (7:02, 7:16).
    • Globe: Links to the coin's website (7:23).
    • Magnifying Glass: Shows contract address and searches it on Twitter for research (7:32).
    • People Icon: Holder count (7:48).
    • Wallet Icon: Dev wallet percentage and funding source (e.g., CEX) (8:00 - 8:12).
    • Running Person Icon: Sniper percentage (supply bought on block 1) (8:12).
    • Hidden Person Icon: Insider percentage (supply transferred from dev wallet) (8:27).
    • Crown Icon: Top holder concentration percentage (8:53).
    • Linked Boxes Icon: Bundle percentage (supply bought by 3+ wallets in the same block) (9:19).
  • Discipline Tip: Avoid trying to scalp every new pair for small gains. Focus on quality over quantity to avoid losses from rugs or low-narrative coins fading quickly (4:10 - 5:58). The liquidity for successful scalpers often comes from less experienced traders chasing everything.

Trading Execution Settings (9:34 - 10:25)

  • Key Insight: Speed matters in memecoins; optimize settings for faster execution.
  • Recommended Settings:
    • Slippage: 30% (due to high volatility, especially on low MC coins) (9:46 - 9:54).
    • Priority Fee (Bribe): 0.01 - 0.03 SOL (or higher if sniping) ensures faster transaction inclusion (9:54 - 10:05).
    • Mev Protection: Keep ON (though less common now, protects against sandwich attacks) (10:05 - 10:17).
    • Practical Application: The speaker shows accessing the settings via the gear icon and adjusting these parameters (9:44 - 10:17).

Leveraging Axiom's Trackers (10:25 - 13:47)

  • Twitter Tracker:
    • Purpose: Catch news-driven coins or trends early (e.g., Elon Musk tweets) (10:25 - 10:35).
    • Setup: Go to "Trackers" > "Customize Feed" and add relevant Twitter handles. The speaker provides a list (10:49 - 11:03).
    • Usage: Keep the Twitter Alerts panel open while monitoring Pulse (11:04 - 11:10).
    • Practical Example: Shows how an Elon Musk tweet about "Poseidon" correlated with a +51% gain on a $POSEIDON coin (11:20 - 11:29).
    • Warning: Don't rely solely on Twitter alerts; always do your own research (DYOR) on narrative strength (11:44 - 12:05).
  • Wallet Tracker:
    • Purpose: Track profitable traders' activities to understand flows and find potential plays (12:05 - 12:11).
    • Finding Wallets: Look for wallets shared on Twitter or identify top performing wallets within a specific coin's "Top Traders" tab (12:39 - 12:47).
    • Adding Wallets: Go to "Trackers" > "Wallet Manager" > "Add Wallet" (12:11 - 12:14, 12:59 - 13:00).
    • Analyzing Activity: View PNL, Balance, History (buys/sells), and current positions (12:17 - 12:26, 13:03 - 13:07).
    • Practical Example: Adds "Pow" wallet and views its PNL/activity (12:11 - 12:26).
    • Practical Example: Finds a "Bundler" wallet from a coin's top traders and adds it (12:41 - 13:01).
    • Warning: Do NOT blindly copy trade. Use it as a research tool to see where attention/money is flowing, then make your own decision based on narrative strength and entry (13:08 - 13:47). Copy trading often results in worse entries and higher risk.

Advanced Axiom Features & Strategies (13:47 - 18:12)

  • Multi-Wallet Strategy:
    • Benefit 1 (Stealth/Distribution): Buying large amounts across multiple wallets prevents appearing as a huge holder, reducing sell pressure/FUD (14:06 - 14:13, 14:31 - 15:14).
    • Benefit 2 (Organization/Risk Management): Segregate capital for different strategies (e.g., one wallet for low-cap "trenching," one for quick liquidity, one for holding profits) (15:14 - 16:46).
    • Practical Application: Shows creating a new wallet within Axiom's Portfolio tab (14:17 - 14:21).
    • Practical Tip: Implement a rule (e.g., if trenching wallet exceeds 100 SOL, move profits to the treasury wallet) to enforce risk management (15:36 - 16:04).
  • Fee Rebate System:
    • Benefit: Axiom automatically refunds a percentage of trading fees back to your account, rewarding activity and reducing costs over time (16:46 - 17:37).
    • Practical Application: Shows the "Rewards" tab where rebates accumulate (16:47).
  • Perpetuals Trading:
    • Feature: Built-in futures trading interface for hedging or speculating on assets like BTC (17:37 - 18:12).
    • Practical Application: Briefly displays the BTC-USD perpetuals chart and order book (17:38).

The Alpha Filter Strategy (Finding Quality Coins) (18:12 - 25:04)

  • Core Concept: A 3-step filter to identify high-quality memecoin plays.
  • Step 1: Environment (18:56 - 20:51):
    • Check Volume: Assess market health by observing the frequency of coin migrations in the Pulse tab (high frequency = hot market) (18:57 - 19:19).
    • Identify Leading Narrative/Meta: Determine the dominant theme or trend currently capturing market attention (e.g., a specific launchpad, a celebrity, a type of meme) (19:19 - 20:51).
    • Practical Example: Discusses the "Heaven Launchpad" meta, where coins related to "Heaven" gained significant traction (21:06 - 21:26). Searching for "Light" (a Heaven coin) is shown (19:46).
  • Step 2: Narrative Strength (20:51 - 23:22):
    • Assess "Why Buy?": Evaluate the reason behind the coin's existence and potential appeal. Does it relate to strong categories like tech, culture (strong memes/communities), or news/events? (20:51 - 21:16).
    • Contrast: Compare coins with weak narratives (random, meaningless memes like "butt plug") to those with stronger ties (e.g., Hachiko endorsed by the Heaven team) (21:16 - 23:08).
    • Practical Example: Shows Bayside's $18.1k profit on Hachiko, attributed to recognizing its strong narrative link to the Heaven team (22:50 - 22:58).
  • Step 3: Asymmetrical Upside (23:22 - 25:04):
    • Identify Inefficiency: Look for a mismatch where the coin's current price/market cap seems low relative to its assessed narrative strength and the prevailing market environment (23:22 - 23:32).
    • Practical Example: Hachiko at a few hundred K MC was considered inefficiently priced given the Heaven team's endorsement when their main coin (Light) was much higher (23:32 - 23:45).
    • Goal: Focus on finding these "good wins" where narrative and low entry provide significant potential upside, rather than just any small win on a random coin (24:41 - 25:04).
    • Practical Application: Shows searching Hachiko (23:33), Light (21:49), and AMP (24:17) and viewing their charts to potentially identify entry points based on this strategy.

Conclusion (25:05 - 25:46)

  • Recap: Emphasizes the importance of filtering for quality and using Axiom's tools correctly.
  • Call to Action: Promotes the speaker's coaching program (Fortune Inner Circle) for more in-depth guidance (25:11 - 25:44).

Video 2: Memecoins is the new oppurtunity Course By Alex Choi

Chapter 1: The Opportunity (Why are You Doing This?)

This section sets the stage by defining the crypto market's current state and the trader's core objective.

  • (0:42) Key Insight: Crypto is framed as the "biggest financial shift since the creation of the internet."
  • (0:50) Key Insight: The current market offers "asymmetrical upside" (the potential for massive gains relative to risk), but this opportunity is "temporary" and will decrease as the market matures and more institutions enter.
  • (1:00) Key Insight: The result of this immature market is extreme "Volatility."
  • (1:07) Key Insight: A trader's primary job is not to find the "next Amazon" (a single long-term hold) but to find ways to "capitalize on this volatility."
  • (1:18) Key Insight: To capitalize on volatility, you must "be ready to adapt."

Chapter 2: How Do You Adapt?

This chapter focuses on the practical skills required to navigate the fast-moving, volatile market.

  • (3:40) Key Insight: You must "constantly stay updated on the timeline." The speaker emphasizes that the market "moves at the speed of information" (4:00) and that you must be aware of market shifts 24/7.
  • (3:58) Key Insight: "Everything is public." Unlike traditional markets, most critical information (e.g., influencer wallets, developer actions, new token contracts) is on-chain or on public platforms like Twitter (now X).
  • (4:11) Key Insight: "Follow the right people on CT" (Crypto Twitter). The speaker advises curating a specific list of influential or early-moving accounts rather than "drowning" in the noise of "reply farming accounts" (4:40).
  • (4:17) Key Insight: "Pay attention to oversaturation." When a specific strategy or narrative (like a type of memecoin) becomes too popular and copied, the opportunity and "edge" associated with it disappears.
  • (4:21) Key Insight: "Update your strategy constantly." You must be "willing to pivot" (4:27). A strategy that worked last month (or even last week) may not work today.

Chapter 3: Create an Edge for Yourself

This section explains the core concept of finding and using an "edge," or an advantage, over other traders.

  • (6:59) Key Insight: "Trading is psychological." Your advantage comes from "outwitting the masses" (7:07), especially during "slower markets."
  • (7:14) Key Insight: Your goal is to "look for unfair opportunities" where you have an advantage.
  • (7:30) Key Insight: You must "paint context and look for an advantage." Don't just ask if a coin is good; ask how good it can realistically be and what specific events (catalysts) will lead it to that point (7:42).
  • (8:08) Key Insight: An "edge is always changing." What gave traders an advantage in the past will not be the same advantage today.
  • (10:04) Key Insight: During slow markets, "train your brain" by analyzing past successful trends. Ask yourself, "What gave people who were early an advantage then?" This helps you prepare to spot the next edge when it forms.
  • (10:46) Key Insight: A key skill is processing public information faster than everyone else to make a well-reasoned decision.

Chapter 4: Not Every Win is a Good Win

This final chapter focuses on the psychological aspect of trading and the difference between luck and skill.

  • (11:17) Key Insight: Not every profitable trade ("win") is a "good win."
  • (11:27) Key Insight: "False wins create false confidence." If you make money on a random trade you didn't understand (e.g., buying a memecoin purely on hype), you learn "absolutely nothing" (11:37).
  • (11:50) Key Insight: This "false confidence" is dangerous because it leads traders to "blow up" their accounts on future trades, believing they have a skill they don't.
  • (11:39) Key Insight: "You are here for a bigger goal," which is to build a repeatable, long-term skill set.
  • (11:46) Key Insight: "Judge yourself by whether you are building an actual skill" and a consistent habit, not by the profit or loss of a single trade.

Practical Examples and Applications Shown

The speaker demonstrates his principles using these specific examples:

  • Example 1: The "Solana Trenches" & Evolving Edge (3:05, 9:17)

    • Application: The speaker shows the "New Pairs" list on the Axiom trading platform (3:05).
    • Description: He explains that his past edge (turning $500 into $104k) was trading these brand-new coins 18 hours a day (9:17). Back then, the "edge" was simply finding a coin with a Telegram group and a meme before others. He states this edge is now "gone" (9:27) due to "oversaturation" (3:23) and new tools (snipers, trackers) that everyone uses. This illustrates the "oversaturation" and "constantly updating strategy" principles.
  • Example 2: Public Information Edge (Jeff Bezos Follow) (5:03)

    • Application: He demonstrates the "Everything is public" principle by analyzing the "SPARK" coin.
    • Description: He opens the coin's Twitter (X) profile (5:09) and scrolls through its "Following" list. He discovers that the official account for "Jeff Bezos" (@JeffBezos) is following the project (5:15). He clarifies this isn't a direct endorsement, but the public fact of this follow is an "information edge" that will "garner an extreme amount of attention" (5:28) and impact the price.
  • Example 3: Painting Context & Fast Decisions ("Artificial Superintelligence") (10:18)

    • Application: He models his real-time analysis process for finding an "advantage."
    • Description: He clicks on a coin named "AS" (Artificial Superintelligence) on Axiom. He immediately opens its Twitter, finds the source (a tweet from @EvanKirstel), and "paints context" (10:00). He deduces it's a "buzzword" (10:10) with "no product behind it" (10:25). He determines its only chance of success is a massive, unlikely influencer endorsement. He processes this information fast and makes the decision not to buy (10:46), avoiding a trade based on empty hype.
  • Example 4: Identifying a "False Win" (FRONKS) (11:55)

    • Application: He demonstrates the concept of a "bad win" using the "FRONKS" memecoin.
    • Description: He pulls up the coin on Axiom and its Twitter profile (12:00), identifying it as a "cartoon frog" (12:05) with "no actual value" (12:15). He asks, "What edge do I have in this... trade?" (12:20) and concludes he has none, as only insiders could know its trajectory. He explains that if he bought this coin and it "magically goes up" (12:30), it would be a "false win" that teaches him "nothing" (12:35) and dangerously builds "false confidence" (12:50).

How pepole turned $500 into $2M Trading Memecoins

2. Memecoin Millionaire Mindset (00:27 - 10:19)

  • Key Insight (0:45): Developing the right mindset before achieving success is crucial. Consistency ("showing up every single day") and a winning attitude are emphasized over relying purely on luck.
  • Key Insight (1:08): Obsession is mandatory. Success requires deep dedication, extensive research, continuous learning, and significant time commitment (speaker mentions 18-hour days). It shouldn't feel like work if you're truly obsessed.
  • Key Insight (3:00): Information is largely public. Success isn't about secret knowledge but about the effort put into finding and analyzing publicly available information (social media like Twitter, coin websites, blockchain data).
  • Key Insight (5:11): Treat memecoin trading as a main priority, not a side hustle, requiring constant attention and learning.
  • Key Insight (6:24): Set realistic goals. Vague goals lead to burnout. Break down long-term visions into smaller, achievable steps.
  • Key Insight (7:06): Aim for the "Flow State" by balancing the challenge of your goals/trades with your current skill level. Goals should be specific, time-bound, and realistic to your capacity. (Visualized with a graph).
  • Key Insight (7:58): Goals should be specific (e.g., numerical profit target) and time-bound (e.g., daily, weekly, monthly target) to create accountability and maintain focus.

3. Capital Rotation (10:20 - 15:42)

  • Key Insight (10:20): Understand Capital Rotation. Money flows between different types of coins and narratives (e.g., memes -> utility, different chains). Nothing stays popular forever.
  • Key Insight (10:41): Identify the current leading narrative and constantly look for signs of the next emerging narrative. Follow where the attention and money are moving.
  • Key Insight (11:09): Recognize catalysts for rotation: Narrative exhaustion, profit-taking leading to excess liquidity searching for new opportunities, or new technological/market developments.
  • Key Insight (11:35): History often rhymes. Past market cycles and narrative shifts can provide clues about future rotations, although the specifics will differ.

4. Narrative Identification (15:43 - 20:09)

  • Key Insight (15:50): Analyze why previous successful memecoins ("runners") gained traction. Understand the narratives that resonated.
  • Key Insight (16:11): Avoid blanket statements. Each coin's potential success depends on its unique narrative and context. Don't blindly apply the reasons for one coin's pump to another.
  • Key Insight (16:41): Apply an "Alpha Filter" (framework mentioned):
    • Gauging Attention: Who is the target audience? Why would this coin attract their attention?
    • Gauging Bull Catalysts: What is the potential upside/ceiling for attention? What future events could drive more attention? When might attention die down?
  • Key Insight (17:55): You must be able to articulate a clear thesis (reason) for entering any trade.

5. Narrative Identification pt. 2 (20:10 - 22:45)

  • Key Insight (20:38): Practice constantly. Assess every coin you encounter, even those you don't trade, to train your narrative identification skills.
  • Key Insight (20:51): Be harsh on yourself & take accountability. Analyze missed opportunities and losing trades objectively. Understand why you failed or missed out; this self-criticism is crucial for improvement. Frustration can be channeled into growth.

6. Conclusion / Promotion (22:46 - 23:24)

  • (Insights here are less strategic, more promotional, but imply value in community/mentorship).

Practical Examples & Applications Shown:

  • Flow State Graph (7:06 - 7:57): Visual representation of balancing "Challenge" (Y-axis) vs. "Skills" (X-axis) to achieve the optimal "Flow" state for peak performance and engagement, avoiding "Anxiety" (too hard) or "Boredom" (too easy). Applied to setting trading goals.
  • Crypto Data Platforms (10:59, 11:13, 11:20, 13:45): Screenshots of platforms like CoinMarketCap (for $HYPE) and DEX Screener (for $LAUNCH, $CLANKER, $GOAT) are shown. While not demonstrating specific trades, they illustrate the tools used for monitoring price action, market cap, and volume – essential for tracking narratives and rotations.
  • Discord/Twitter Analysis Example (17:16 - 17:27): A brief glimpse of a Discord channel and Twitter profile related to "$AOL (America Online) Coin". It shows sharing of coin information including contract address, market cap, Fully Diluted Valuation (FDV), liquidity, chart links, and key points about the narrative (nostalgia, potential backers). This demonstrates the type of research and information sharing involved in identifying potential plays within a community context.
  • Discord Success Examples (23:02, 23:08): Screenshots presented as testimonials from the speaker's "Fortune Collective" group.
    • One shows a user "$joobi" with a +$51.02 (+268.48%) gain on a small position.
    • Another shows user "Bobby Cheng" apparently turning $3000 into over $11000 quickly after learning about narratives. These are presented as results of applying the discussed principles within a guided environment, though lack detailed context on the specific trades.

Video 3: Memecoins ARE NOT LUCK by Alex Choi

Introduction & Proof (0:00 - 1:00)

  • Key Insight: The speaker claims significant profit ($1k to $100k+) trading memecoins, emphasizing that success isn't just luck but involves specific principles. (0:00 - 0:10)
  • Practical Example: Shows profit and loss (PnL) tracking using the Axiom Pro platform for Solana trades (0:20 - 0:34) and Metamask for EVM chains (Ethereum Virtual Machine compatible chains like Ethereum, Base, etc.) (0:35 - 0:40). This demonstrates multi-chain activity and profit tracking tools.
  • Key Insight: Profits were concentrated in a select few high-performing coins, implying the importance of identifying specific high-potential plays rather than needing consistent small wins. (0:45 - 1:00)

Starting with $1k: Why Precision Matters (1:00 - 6:35)

  • Key Insight: Trading with small capital ($1000) requires extreme precision because the margin for error is tiny. One significant mistake can wipe out the entire capital. (1:00 - 1:11)
  • Strategy: Focus exclusively on maximizing high-risk, high-reward plays with asymmetric upside. Build a foundation and rules around this principle. (1:11 - 1:18, 1:35-1:40)
  • Actionable Tip: To implement this, three components are crucial:
    1. Proper Trading Setup (1:48 - 3:41):
      • Tool: Use efficient trading bots. Axiom Pro is recommended for Solana (claims: fastest, low fees, secure, Y Combinator backed). (1:49 - 2:14)
      • Practical Example (Axiom Setup): Shows signing up via a link (mentions referral "Fortune" for fee discount) (2:15 - 2:30).
      • Practical Example (Axiom Filter): Demonstrates setting a minimum market cap filter (e.g., $11k) in Axiom's "New Pairs" section to filter out extreme low-quality coins while still catching early opportunities. (2:31 - 2:58)
      • Tool: Banana Gun is recommended for EVM chains. (3:13 - 3:20)
      • Practical Example (Banana Gun): Shows finding the setup link/documentation via their official Twitter profile and website docs. (3:20 - 3:36)
    2. Curated Twitter Profile (Crypto Twitter - CT) (3:41 - 5:29):
      • Key Insight: CT is presented as the most vital research tool for news, narratives, and sentiment. (3:46 - 3:52)
      • Strategy: Curate your Twitter feed by following relevant, high-quality accounts (good traders, crypto institutions, influencers, news feeds). (3:52 - 4:08)
      • Practical Example: Suggests using the speaker's "Following" list on Twitter (@notalexchoi) as a starting point. (3:57 - 4:18)
      • Actionable Tip: Ensure your "For You" and "Following" feeds primarily show crypto content to stay informed about market narratives and attention flow. (4:26 - 4:55)
      • Practical Application (Research): Use Twitter to check which known/respected accounts ("notable mutuals") follow a potential coin project's profile as a quick filter or signal for further research. (5:03 - 5:18)
    3. Efficient Community (5:29 - 6:35):
      • Key Insight: Trading shouldn't be done in isolation. A community accelerates learning and helps discover trading opportunities. (5:50 - 6:05)
      • Practical Example: Shows his private Discord ("Fortune Collective") where strategies, calls (like $SIKUN), and insights are shared. (6:05 - 6:33)

My Personal Trading Rules (6:35 - 10:46)

  • Key Insight: Strict personal rules are essential for risk management, maintaining objectivity, and surviving volatility, especially with low capital. (6:35 - 6:50)
  • Rule 1: Always Look to Take Initial Profits (6:53 - 7:42):
    • Rationale: Protects capital in a volatile market where many coins fail. Taking out the initial investment makes the rest of the trade risk-free. Reduces emotional stress and aids objective decision-making. (7:00 - 7:10, 7:25-7:35)
    • Practical Example: The speaker shows his own trading history filled with frequent sell orders on Axiom as evidence of taking profits. (7:11 - 7:14)
  • Rule 2: Never Buy Back Into the Same Coin (Unless Narrative/News Changes) (7:42 - 8:33):
    • Rationale: Avoids emotional trading driven by FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) or regret after selling. Re-entering often indicates a lack of initial conviction. (7:47 - 8:10)
    • Exception: This rule can be broken only if there's a significant, fundamental change in the coin's narrative or new, impactful news emerges after the initial sale. (8:10 - 8:18)
  • Rule 3: Only Trade in My Setup (8:33 - 9:13):
    • Rationale: Ensures trading occurs in a focused, optimal environment (e.g., desktop setup). Avoids distractions and limitations associated with trading on mobile devices, leading to better decision-making. (8:35 - 9:00)
    • Practical Example: The speaker mentions his dedicated setup with multiple monitors and a powerful PC. (8:45 - 8:50)
  • Rule 4: Stay Liquid Across Chains (9:13 - 9:40):
    • Rationale: Don't limit opportunities to a single blockchain. Maintain capital (liquidity) on various relevant chains (e.g., Solana, Ethereum, Base) to be ready for plays wherever they emerge. (9:15 - 9:24)
  • Rule 5: Stable Profits Immediately (9:40 - 10:46):
    • Rationale: Convert profits earned in volatile assets (like SOL or ETH) into stablecoins (USDC, USDT) promptly. This locks in gains and prevents losing profits due to market downturns ("avoids taking a second trade"). Aids clear-headedness. (9:45 - 10:10)
    • Practical Example: Refers to moving profits to a separate wallet and converting them, emphasizing securing the gains. (10:05 - 10:10)

The Alpha Filter (Core Strategy) (10:46 - 24:46)

  • Key Insight: This is the speaker's systematic 3-step process for finding undervalued memecoins before the broader market catches on. (11:08 - 11:15)
  • Step 1: Evaluate Current Market Conditions (11:15 - 13:48): Understand the environment.
    • A. On-Chain Volume?: Gauge market activity (hot/cold). (11:28 - 11:36)
      • Practical Application: Check recent activity on platforms like Axiom ("Migrated", "New Pairs"). High activity/volume = more aggressive stance possible. Low activity = be cautious, protect capital. (11:38 - 12:32)
    • B. Popular Narrative?: Identify the current dominant theme or trend (e.g., specific ecosystem, meme type). (12:47 - 12:53)
      • Practical Application: Use Twitter and communities to see what's being discussed. Example given: The Bonk ecosystem narrative being strong at the time of recording. (13:15 - 13:35)
  • Step 2: Value the Narrative (13:48 - 18:56): Assess the potential of a specific coin's story.
    • A. Reach (How many people see it?): Does the narrative appeal to a large or relevant audience? (14:35 - 14:38)
      • Practical Example (Pochita): "Bonk's Sister" narrative has high reach potential due to Bonk's large market cap and recognition. Simple, relatable narratives (memes, animals) often have broad appeal. (14:50 - 15:18)
    • B. Reaction (How will people react?): Is the reaction likely to be positive (buying pressure)? (15:21 - 15:25)
      • Practical Example (Pochita): Positive reaction likely, as people see Bonk's success and speculate the "sister" could follow. (15:31 - 15:38)
    • C. Ceiling (What's the attention ceiling?): What's the realistic potential market cap? (15:42 - 15:46)
      • Method: Look for concrete Bull Catalysts (future events, utility, strong backers) and Comparables (similar narrative coins and their performance). (16:00 - 16:10)
      • Practical Example (Pochita): Limited clear catalysts besides narrative spread. Comparable: Momo (another "Bonk sister") reached $25M+. Old Pochita reached $35M. Suggests a multi-million ceiling is possible, but maybe not extremely high without new factors. (16:10 - 17:08)
    • D. Longevity (How long will reaction last?): Is it a short-term pump or sustainable interest? (18:13 - 18:16)
      • Method: Depends heavily on catalysts and continued narrative relevance. (18:17 - 18:20)
      • Practical Example (Pochita): Without strong ongoing catalysts, the reaction might be shorter-lived compared to coins with utility or strong backing. (18:21 - 18:40)
  • Step 3: Spot the Inefficiency (Before Repricing) (18:56 - 24:46): Find the mispricing.
    • Core Idea: Identify coins where the current market cap is significantly lower than the potential suggested by Steps 1 & 2. (18:57 - 19:10)
    • Practical Example (Pochita): Found new Pochita on the Bonk launchpad (relevant to current narrative) at a very low MC ($35k entry) despite the "Bonk Sister" narrative and high potential reach/reaction. This disparity was the inefficiency. (19:10 - 20:39)
    • Practical Example (SBET - Sharplink Gaming): Identified the coin based on major news (Nasdaq company using ETH). Narrative (TradFi bridge, stock meme potential) was strong. Market condition (ETH hot) was favorable. Found the coin at a low MC ($161k entry). The combination of strong narrative, relevant chain, and low entry MC represented the inefficiency. (21:01 - 22:45)

Immediate Lessons (Summary) (24:46 - 27:19)

  • Actionable Takeaways:
    1. Optimize your physical trading environment. (24:47)
    2. Establish and strictly follow your trading rules. (25:01)
    3. Engage with a trading community. (25:21)
    4. Start with small position sizes, especially when learning. (25:38)
    5. Systematically apply a framework (like the Alpha Filter) to evaluate every potential trade. (26:09)
    6. Keep a trading journal and review trades daily for improvement. (26:26)

What Can I Take Out of This? (Mindset) (27:19 - 28:47)

  • Key Mindset:
    1. Obsession: Deep dedication and constant market awareness are required. (27:20)
    2. Question Everything: Develop critical thinking and form your own conviction for each trade. (27:50)
    3. System Over Gambling: Rely on a repeatable process, not random bets. (28:17)

Video 4: Memecoins are not just for whales or lucky pepole By Alex Choi

Introduction & Core Premise (0:00 - 1:25)

  • Claim: The speaker made $1.3 million last month trading memecoins (0:16, 0:44).
  • Core Requirement: Success requires the right system, setup, and mindset (0:08).
  • Problem Addressed: "Trading Blind" - being overwhelmed by market noise, making impulsive hype-based trades, and lacking a system, leading to losses (0:59 - 1:11).
  • Solution Proposed: The "Alpha Filter," a 3-part system designed to filter 99% of noise and identify the 1% of valuable coins (0:52, 1:26).
  • Key Insight: A system is needed to separate signal (valuable information) from noise (market hype, distractions) (1:26).

The Complete Framework Outline (1:26 - 2:14)

  • The video breaks down the strategy into five core components (1:35 - 2:07):
    • The Edge: Why memecoins favor the underdog.
    • The Setup: Full trading terminal (Axiom, Pulse filters, sniper presets).
    • The Alpha Filter: Core strategy to find winning coins.
    • The Rules: Risk management to prevent blowing up accounts.
    • The Mindset: Psychology hacks for consistent daily profit.
  • Emphasis: This is presented as a repeatable system, not luck or hype (2:09).

The Memecoin Edge (2:15 - 3:52)

  • Why Memecoins?: They offer daily asymmetric opportunities ("shots") unlike stocks, Bitcoin, or other "safe" assets because they are driven purely by attention, narrative, and culture, not fundamentals (2:27 - 2:35).
  • Key Insight: Memecoins are fundamentally "belief systems with liquidity attached" (2:40). Value is derived from collective belief and attention.
  • Practical Example ($TRUMP): Ran to $75 billion market cap driven purely by politics (attention = liquidity) (2:45).
  • Practical Example ($WIF): A simple "dog wif hat" meme became a multi-billion dollar cultural asset, proving market, culture, and narrative are the value (2:58).
  • 3 Pillars of Asymmetric Opportunity (3:17 - 3:40):
    1. Narrative Liquidity: Getting the story/narrative early is key because capital follows belief.
    2. Community Scale: Small communities (like Telegram groups) can move significant capital faster than traditional funding rounds.
    3. Execution Velocity: Speed matters intensely. The right tools (like fast trading terminals) allow smaller players to react quicker than large "whales."
  • Core Idea: Memecoin volatility isn't a weakness; it's the engine that provides the edge (3:44, 3:48).

The Trading Setup: Your Digital Cockpit (3:53 - 8:30)

  • Goal: Avoid slow, inefficient setups. Speed provides leverage; milliseconds matter (4:08).
  • Hardware Setup (4:11): A multi-monitor setup is crucial to avoid "trading blind."
    • Screen 1: Twitter (Curated crypto feed for news/narrative).
    • Screen 2: Axiom (Execution Terminal for trading/analysis).
    • Screen 3: Telegram/Discord (Community/Alpha groups), New Pair Trackers.
  • Twitter/X - The Heartbeat Monitor (4:33 - 6:25):
    • Principle: Memes move at the speed of tweets; your feed is the market's pulse (4:34).
    • Actionable Tip: Ruthlessly curate your feed. If your "For You" page isn't pure crypto, you're missing information and losing money (4:53).
    • Who to Follow: Top traders, narrative "snipers," meme accounts driving culture, Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs) spotting attention flow early (4:56).
    • Practical Application: The speaker shows his curated Twitter feed and profiles he follows as examples (5:18 - 6:25).
  • Telegram & Discord - The War Rooms (6:26 - 7:00):
    • Principle: Memes are built in communities; these are hubs for dev updates, insider info, and cult vibes (6:27).
    • The Real Edge: Finding serious, tight-knit groups that share actual "alpha" (e.g., tracking wallets, scanning new launches) (6:45).
    • Warning: 90% of free groups are traps designed for admins to shill coins and dump on members (exit liquidity) (6:48).
  • Phantom Wallet - Your Arsenal (7:01 - 7:11):
    • Necessity: Essential tool for interacting with the Solana ecosystem (secure, fast) (7:01).
    • Action Steps: Install browser extension, purchase $SOL on an exchange (Coinbase, Binance, Kraken), send $SOL to your new Phantom Wallet address (7:04).
  • Axiom - Your Execution Terminal (7:18 - 8:30):
    • Description: An all-in-one trading platform specifically for Solana (7:20).
    • Key Features Shown: Real-time tracker for new coins/volume, integrated Twitter feed/wallet tracker with alerts, integrated bundle checker, on-chain perpetuals trading, fee rebate system (7:29 - 7:48).
    • Practical Application: Shows the Axiom interface ("Pulse" tab with New Pairs, Near Migration, Migrated sections) (7:49 - 8:29).
    • Actionable Tip: Use referral code "Fortune" when signing up for Axiom via the link in the video description for 20% off fees (8:07).

The Alpha Filter - 3 Step System (Core Strategy) (8:31 - 11:15, 20:38 - 22:05)

  • Overall Goal: Filter 99% of junk coins, find the 1% worth attention.
  • Step 1: Market Condition Check (8:31 - 10:28 & 20:38 - 21:12):
    • Tool: Use Axiom's "Pulse" tab (New Pairs, Near Migration, Migrated) (8:52).
    • Determine Market Type (Pulse Tab Strategy) (9:12):
      • Hot Market: Many coins moving to "Migrated." -> Action: Hunt in "New Pairs." Apply Filters: Min Market Cap $11k+ (to filter dead coins), potentially filter by protocol (9:23). (Practical example of setting filter shown at 9:38).
      • Normal/Slow Market: Low volume, few coins migrating. -> Action: Restrict focus to "Migrated Only." No filters needed; study proven coins (9:53).
    • Rationale: Focus on quality (Migrated coins have proven demand) and maintain discipline (avoid random new pairs) (10:06).
    • Warning: Avoid the "fantasy" of scalping 50 fresh pairs; it's a trap. Focus on asymmetric, narrative-driven runners, often found after migration (10:44).
    • Simplified Check (20:53): Is volume flowing? Are new launches getting buys? Is there a dominant narrative? -> Is the environment GREEN? Yes = Aggressive; No = Risk Off/Sit Tight.
  • Step 2: Narrative Valuation (21:13 - 21:31):
    • Core Question: Does this coin's story deserve attention? (21:20)
    • Questions to Ask: Will people see it? How will they react? What's the potential ceiling (attention limit)? How long can the story last? (21:21 - 21:24).
    • Decision Rule: If the answers aren't strong, skip immediately (21:29).
  • Step 3: Inefficiency Check (This is the Edge) (21:32 - 22:05):
    • Core Question: Is there a mispriced window of opportunity? (21:32).
    • Checks: Has Crypto Twitter (CT) widely caught on yet, or are you early? Is it lagging behind similar coins that already pumped? Are insiders or respected "smart money" wallets accumulating? (21:34).
    • The Payoff: If 'Yes' to these checks, this is how you find 10x, 50x, 100x opportunities before the masses ("herd") arrive (21:49).
    • Fundamental Rule: Most lose by forcing trades daily. Win by trading only when the filtered conditions align ("We don't predict. We filter.") (21:58 - 22:01).

Practical Tools & Tactics within Axiom (11:16 - 18:04)

  • Decoding Pulse Icons (11:16 - 13:26): Understanding icons helps assess risk/opportunity quickly.
    • Developer Wallets: Check deployer history (recycled wallet = potential re-rug?) (11:23). Example shown at 11:32.
    • Bundle Wallets: Funds dispersed to many wallets at launch? Could indicate insiders planning to dump (11:27). Example shown at 11:55.
    • Insider Holders: Tokens airdropped for free? Red flag (11:50).
    • Snipers: Wallets buying in the very first block. Consistent sniper success can be a positive signal (high IQ money) (12:24). Example shown at 12:32.
    • Twitter Logo: Hover to see previous linked Twitter handles. Multiple handles could mean rebranding or deception (12:47). Example shown at 12:59.
  • Execution Settings (Axiom Presets) (13:27 - 15:34): Set these ONCE to ensure speed and safety.
    • Slippage (30%): Allows trades to execute even with high volatility (14:10).
    • Priority Fee (0.01-0.03 SOL): Pays validators extra to prioritize your transaction (14:13).
    • Bribe/Tip (0.01-0.03 SOL): Similar to priority fee, incentivizes inclusion in the next block (14:17).
    • MEV Protection (ALWAYS ON): Protects against "sandwich attacks" where bots front-run and back-run your trade, costing you money (14:29).
    • Practical Application: Shows exactly where to set these presets in the Axiom interface (14:34 - 15:34).
  • Wallet Tracker (Follow Smart Money) (15:35 - 16:53):
    • Concept: Use tools like Axiom to track what successful wallets are buying/selling in real-time, their PnL, and allocation size (15:40).
    • Practical Application: Shows importing a list of tracked wallets into Axiom's tracker feature (15:42 - 15:51) and the resulting feed (15:52).
    • Crucial Warning: DO NOT BLIND COPY-TRADE. Use tracking for intel/ideas, then apply your own Alpha Filter and make your own decisions (16:04, 16:22). Copying works ONLY if you understand the narrative and WHY they are in the trade (16:41).
  • Advanced Tactic: Multi-Wallet Edge (16:54 - 18:04):
    • Axiom Feature: Create unlimited wallets; split buys automatically across them (16:54).
    • Benefit 1 (Discreet Accumulation): Holding large % (e.g., 3-4%) in one wallet looks threatening ("scary"). Splitting it (e.g., 1% in 3 wallets) looks benign and keeps your activity private (17:03).
    • Benefit 2 (Organization & Risk Control - Wallet Structure): Use different wallets for different purposes (17:20):
      • Wallet 1 ("Trenching"): Small amount (e.g., ~100 SOL) for active trading, testing new coins (small size plays) (17:23, 17:34).
      • Wallet 2 ("Spare Liquidity"): Dry powder (stablecoins/SOL) ready for immediate opportunities (17:25).
      • Wallet 3 ("Profits"): Secure wallet to immediately move significant gains into for safety (17:28). Sweep excess profits from Trenching wallet here (17:51).
    • The "100 SOL Trench System" (Practical Application): A specific implementation of the multi-wallet strategy focusing on disciplined small-scale plays and profit sweeping (17:30 - 18:04).

Case Studies (Applying the Alpha Filter) (22:06 - 27:50)

  • Case Study 1: $SYZY (Kanye Coin) - $1.1M Profit (22:06 - 25:55):
    • Step 1 (Market Condition): Hot (Solana cycle high, celeb/politics meta proven). Verdict: "Risk-on" (22:16).
    • Step 2 (Narrative): Huge visibility (Kanye), viral reaction guaranteed, potential #1 celeb coin. Target: ~$250M market cap based on $MOTHER comparison but Kanye being bigger (22:46).
    • Step 3 (Inefficiency): Found contract early via on-chain analysis before public launch, saw insiders buying after tweet. Catalyst was "face endorsement" tweet. Exit trigger was that tweet going live, indicating peak narrative fuel spent. Sold within 20-30% of the top (24:09).
    • Result: Perfectly timed entry due to mispricing and clear exit plan = $1.1M profit (25:54).
  • Case Study 2: $VIDEO Trade - $500k+ Profit (25:56 - 27:50):
    • Step 1 (Market Condition): Hot (AI meta ripping from $GOAT run), high volume of new launches. Verdict: "Risk-on" (26:06). (Shows $GOAT chart 26:14).
    • Step 2 (Narrative): Strong backing (trusted mutuals, Paradigm VC shown 26:59), real substance (devs building actual app, not just hype), high ceiling (story had potential longevity) (26:47). (Shows Twitter proof 26:53, App Store link 27:00).
    • Step 3 (Inefficiency): Mispricing ($30k market cap initially), comparison (weaker tech coins running to millions without backing). Edge was the massive valuation gap (27:15).
    • Result: Loaded position, held, scaled in -> $500k+ profit (shown via screenshots 27:37, 27:41).

Risk Management & Psychology (27:51 - 32:51)

  • Risk Management: How to Survive (27:51 - 29:32):
    • Core Principle: Good entries don't matter if risk management is poor; you will blow up (27:54).
    • Speaker's Mistake: Made $11M in NFTs but lost 90% due to overexposure to a single asset (emotional attachment) (28:03 - 28:19).
    • "Emotional Rug": Not a dev rug pull, but you pulling liquidity from your own future via bad decisions (overleveraging, averaging down, FOMO, emotional attachment/refusing to sell losers) (28:24 - 28:56).
    • Survival Framework (Wallet Structure): Main/Conviction, Test/Sniffer, Vault/Cold Storage wallets (29:05). (Detailed earlier).
    • Rule: Capital Preservation Precedes Capital Multiplication (29:13).
    • Rules to Keep Printing: Only risk affordable loss, never all-in, take profits often, rotate profits to vault, journal (29:17).
    • Key Insight: The market doesn't take your money; your behavior gives it away (29:33). Discipline to survive downturns is the "Real Alpha" (29:43).
    • Winning Formula: Discipline + Psychology = Luck turned into Repeatable Income (29:56).
  • Trading Psychology: Winning the Mental Game (30:03 - 32:24):
    • Insight: Memecoins are 90% technical, 90% mental (30:05).
    • Commandments of Profitability: Detach from $ amounts (think risk units), avoid FOMO/overtrading, plan trades, cut losers decisively, trade system not ego/emotion (30:13 - 30:26).
    • Antidote to Mistakes: Journaling (30:32): 5 minutes of writing saves months of repeating mistakes. Ask the 4 core questions after each session: What was the narrative? Why did I buy? Why did I sell/hold? What would I do differently next time? (30:41, 31:16).
    • Benefits of Journaling: Recognize losing/winning patterns, refine edge (31:08).
    • Practical Example (Speaker's Journal): Identified losing pattern (buying Twitter trends) vs. winning pattern (buying based on on-chain wallet flows before Twitter caught on) (31:31).
  • Final Choice: Excitement vs. Wealth (32:25 - 32:51):
    • Most chase excitement (pumps, trends, luck) -> Result: Broke (32:37).
    • Winners choose "boring" work (Alpha Filter, journaling, principles, analysis) -> Result: Millions (32:38). The "boring" work is what actually generates profits (examples: $SYZY, $VIDEO) (32:44).

Video 5: The updated strategies on solana memecoin space By James Wang

Chapter 1: Introduction & Proof of Credibility (0:00 - 1:06)

  • Key Insight: The speaker claims significant experience and success in crypto trading, starting young and realizing substantial profits ($20M+). (0:00 - 0:22)
  • Key Insight: The speaker emphasizes transparency, stating profits and trades are documented publicly (Twitter/Instagram). (0:08, 0:31, 0:39 - 0:41)
  • Proof Point: Claims $1.3M profit in August 2025 using the strategies to be discussed. (0:25 - 0:29)
  • Proof Point: Shows examples of past high-percentage gains on specific memecoins ($USA, $LETSBONK, $SBET). (0:33 - 0:35)
  • Key Insight: The core strategies are presented as not complicated, repeatable, and somewhat "boring." (0:45 - 0:49)
  • Outline: Introduces the two main strategies: Ruthless High-Velocity Scalping and The Alpha Filter. (0:51 - 0:54)
  • Promise: The video will provide exact presets, filters, and decision criteria used by the speaker. (0:55 - 1:06)

Chapter 2: Foundation: Your Execution Stack (1:07 - 2:00)

  • Key Insight: Trading memecoins directly from a standard wallet UI is inefficient and prone to issues like getting "sandwiched" (front-run). (1:09 - 1:17)
  • Key Insight: Using a high-speed trading bot is considered "non-negotiable" for effective memecoin trading. (1:15 - 1:17)
  • Tool Recommendation: Axiom Trading Bot. (1:18)
  • Justification for Axiom: Block-native, uses private RPC (Remote Procedure Call) to avoid network congestion during volume spikes, offers instant fills, low gas fees, and deep sniper detection. (1:19 - 1:22)
  • Practical Application (Setup):
    • Instructions to sign up via a link (provided in the video description). (1:22 - 1:28)
    • Use referral code "FORTUNE" for a 20% reduction in trading fees. (1:28 - 1:43)
    • Demonstration: Shows the Axiom website (axiom.trade) and the signup process, entering the referral code. (1:44 - 2:00)

Chapter 3: Axiom Bot Presets & Interface Overview (2:01 - 3:02)

  • Practical Application (Interface): Quick walkthrough of Axiom dashboard tabs: Discover, Pulse, Trackers, Perpetuals, Yield, Vision, Portfolio, Rewards. Focus shifts to the "Pulse" tab for new pairs. (2:01 - 2:15)
  • Practical Application (Trading Panel): Shows the buy/sell interface within Axiom Pulse, highlighting settings like USD amount, Slippage, Priority/Bribe fees, and MEV Protection. (2:16 - 2:36)
  • Practical Application (Speaker's Presets):
    • Buy Settings: Slippage: 60%, Priority/Bribe: 0.05 SOL, MEV Protection: ON. (2:37 - 2:42)
    • Sell Settings: Slippage: 40%, Priority/Bribe: 0.025 SOL. (2:43 - 2:47)
    • (Note: High slippage is used to ensure transactions go through in volatile conditions, Priority/Bribe helps transactions get confirmed faster).
  • Key Insight (Risk Management): Keep quick buy sizes small and repeatable (Example: 3-5 SOL). (2:51 - 2:54)
  • Key Insight (Risk Management): Scale into winning trades, survive losing trades by keeping size small. (2:54 - 2:57)
  • Key Insight (Risk Management - "Trenching"): Never trade with your full capital stack in one wallet. Use a separate, smaller wallet for active trading. (2:57 - 3:02)

Chapter 4: Strategy 1: Ruthless High-Velocity Scalping (3:03 - 13:27)

  • Core Concept: Not about high conviction; it's about exploiting short bursts of volume on short-lived narratives. Goal is quick in-and-out trades for consistent small wins. (3:11 - 3:18)
  • Goal: Stay liquid and sell to others who are buying the hype ("sell on their heads"). Do not get emotionally attached ("marry the coin"). (3:19 - 3:39)
  • Scalper's Mindset: Focus on getting in before the crowd and selling into their buying pressure. (3:29 - 3:39)
  • Scalping Rules:
    1. Detach from narratives (focus on profit, not being "right"). (3:40 - 3:45)
    2. Sell on heads (sell into others' confirmation buying). (3:45 - 3:52)
    3. Many small wins > one hero trade (compounding 1-2 SOL wins is effective). (3:52 - 4:05)
  • Practical Application (Scalping Setup/Cockpit):
    • Center Screen: Axiom Pulse (for new activity radar). (4:21 - 4:27)
    • Side Screens: Twitter & Wallet Trackers (for narrative/intel). (4:29 - 4:36)
    • Hand: Trading bot presets (for instant execution). (4:37 - 4:42)
  • Identifying Scalp Opportunities (3 Ingredients):
    1. Legit Enough to Trade: Avoid obvious scams (snipes/bundles). Speed helps, but legitimacy is key. (4:45 - 5:06)
    2. Eye-Catching Narrative: A story that creates temporary hype where curiosity outruns supply. Narrative is #1. (5:06 - 5:20)
    3. Real Volume Spike: Observable flow (wallets buying, transactions increasing). (5:20 - 5:30)
  • 4-Step Analysis Framework (Quick Check):
    1. Identify Story: Authentic or recycled? (5:57 - 6:01)
    2. On-Chain Strength: Strong early buys or bounces on dips? (6:01 - 6:04)
    3. Meta Alignment: Does it fit the current hot trend ("beta play")? (6:04 - 6:10)
    4. Remaining Catalysts: Anything to extend the pump (usually no)? (6:10 - 6:20)
  • Key Insight: Most scalps pump quickly and fade fast; don't expect long holds. Take profits and move on. (6:21 - 6:41)
  • Practical Application (Axiom Filters for Scalping): Showcased filters: New Pairs, Min Market Cap $5k, Max Market Cap $11k, Min Transactions 75-85. (7:10 - 7:25)
  • Entry Tactics:
    • Fresh Pairs (Low MCAP): Look for early entry, flash dumps, or deep retraces. Size in lightly. (7:36 - 7:45)
    • Larger Coins (Higher MCAP): Wait for a 60-80% retrace, enter on the dip, profit quickly on the rebound. (7:45 - 7:53)
  • Practical Application (Case Study: $JOURNEY Scalp):
    • Context: Narrative aligned with "Creators Capital Market" meta. (7:26 - 7:29)
    • Execution: Entered with 10 SOL. (7:29 - 7:30)
    • Chart Demonstration: Shows the Axiom chart for $JOURNEY. Green 'B' markers indicate buys (often on dips/lows), Red 'S' markers indicate sells (quickly into pumps). Multiple rapid trades shown, illustrating the get-in-get-out strategy. Examples of specific trade PnLs displayed on chart (e.g., Buy $49.9k -> Sell $102k). (8:52 - 11:33)
  • Scalper's "If/Then" Rulebook:
    • Entry Triggers (Choose ONE): Early Ignition (buy first big green 1-min candle on new pairs), Controlled Retrace (buy 60-80% pullback after spike if volume holds), Flash-dump Sweep (buy sharp drop only if instantly bought up). (11:59 - 12:17)
    • Exit Rules (Follow Religiously): Scale into Euphoria (sell into big green candles/news, target retest of high), Kill on Weakness (exit immediately if push stalls/volume dies), Don't Chase the Top (secure base profit, move on). (12:20 - 12:44)
  • Risk Management for Scalpers:
    • Position Size: 5-10% of active trading port per scalp. (12:45 - 12:50)
    • Profit Rotation: Sweep profits to a separate "vault" wallet once the active wallet hits a threshold (e.g., ~50 SOL). (12:50 - 12:54)
    • Quality > Quantity: 1 good scalp > 5 mediocre ones. (12:54 - 13:00)
    • Trenching: Reiteration - use a separate trading wallet. (13:00 - 13:11)
  • Scalping Motto: Enter early or on blood | Exit into euphoria | Don't marry bags. (13:15 - 13:27)

Chapter 5: Strategy 2: The Alpha Filter (High-Conviction Engine) (13:28 - 17:57)

  • Core Concept: While scalping provides cash flow, the Alpha Filter aims to find trades with higher multiplier potential (3x, 5x, 10x+). (13:37 - 13:42)
  • Method: A three-stage system to filter noise and identify high-potential plays (the 1%). (13:42 - 13:51)
  • Stage 1: Market Condition Check:
    • Assess volume flow (migration rates, new deploys) and dominant narrative (meta). (13:52 - 14:09)
    • Interpret: Lots of activity ("runners") = Risk-On. Weak price action ("toppers") = Protect Capital. (14:09 - 14:18)
  • Stage 2: Narrative Valuation: Does the story have potential to "travel"?
    • Pillars: 1. Reach (broad audience vs. niche), 2. Reaction Triggers (connects to memes/drama, unique, has proof?), 3. Ceiling & Shelf Life (realistic potential run, duration). (14:23 - 14:50)
  • Stage 3: Inefficiency Check (The Edge):
    • Questions: Is it still early (before Crypto Twitter / CT)? Is it lagging similar coins? Are insiders/smart money loading? (15:01 - 15:18)
    • Payoff: Finding coins here provides a "mispriced window" for significant gains (10x-100x). (15:18 - 15:24)
  • Alpha Filter Rulebook (Scaling & Exits):
    • Sizing: Beginners 0.2-1 SOL per add, Advanced 3-5 SOL. Only add more when data confirms thesis (volume, traction). (15:38 - 15:45)
    • Taking Profits: Rule 1: Trim initial investment on the first pump. Rule 2: Leave a "runner" if the thesis holds. (15:45 - 15:58)
    • De-Risking Signals: High top holder % (>30-40%), bundle selling capping green candles. (15:58 - 16:07)
  • Practical Application (Case Study: $TRUMP Trade):
    • Result: $12.6M group profit, $4M personal profit. (16:08 - 16:12)
    • Stage 1: Market conditions were bullish for memecoins, narrative field was open. (16:23 - 16:43)
    • Stage 2: Narrative was strong ("most popular man," official coin, global visibility, potential ceiling compared to $WIF), shelf life tied to media. (16:44 - 17:07)
    • Visual Aid: Shows $WIF chart as a comparison for $TRUMP's potential. (16:55 - 16:58)
    • Stage 3: Inefficiency identified - caught at $500M market cap, deemed severely undervalued given the figure's influence. (17:08 - 17:20)
    • Tool Demonstration: Shows speaker's Discord "alpha-filter" channel identifying the $TRUMP opportunity early. (17:25 - 17:42)
    • Key Insight: The Alpha Filter provided the conviction to enter and structure the trade for this large opportunity. (17:43 - 17:57)

Chapter 6: Journaling, Psychology & Mindset (18:47 - 20:13)

  • Practical Application (Journaling): Reiterates the 5 Journal Prompts: Why enter? Narrative/volume context? Why exit? What could be better next time? Did trade fit meta or forced? (18:47 - 19:04)
  • Key Insight: Compounding isn't just PnL, it's improving your process memory through review. (19:04 - 19:10)
  • Psychology Pillar: Kill the Noise, Keep the Edge. Memes are 90% mental. (19:11 - 19:20)
  • Mindset Rules:
    • Detach from dollar signs; think in risk units. (19:21 - 19:39)
    • FOMO is a tax; missing a play is okay, another opportunity will come. (19:39 - 19:41)
    • Plan the trade: Define entry, exit, invalidation points beforehand. (19:41 - 19:47)
    • Cut decisively if a trade isn't working or the thesis is invalidated. (19:47 - 19:53)
    • Confidence comes from following your system; Ego leads to revenge trading. (19:53 - 19:58)
  • Core Actionable Advice: If nothing else, Cut losers quickly and Journal your trades. This is key to moving from losing to breakeven to profitable. (19:59 - 20:13)

Chapter 7: Objections & Implementation Plan (20:14 - 22:44)

  • Addressing Objections:
    • Filters too strict? -> Good, reduces hesitation which costs money. (20:19 - 20:26)
    • Missed pumps after exiting? -> Let them go, focus on compounding your wins. (20:26 - 20:50)
    • No time to watch charts all day? -> Simplify, journal, focus on fewer windows, hunt for one good setup. (20:50 - 21:00)
  • Practical Application (7-Day Implementation Plan):
    • Day 1-2: Setup Axiom presets, build custom filters, add Twitter/Wallet trackers, observe smart money moves. (21:10 - 21:39)
    • Day 3-4: Practice Scalping: Execute small scalps (0.15-1 SOL), filter trades by 'Trending' tab, journal every trade. (21:40 - 22:01)
    • Day 5-6: Execute Alpha Filter Play: Scan market, pick meta, make one conviction entry, scale smart, manage risk (cap wallet at ~50 SOL, rotate profits). (22:02 - 22:25)
    • Day 7: Review & Refine: Read journals, identify your best setups ('A-Setups'), plan to focus only on those next week. (22:26 - 22:44)

Chapter 8: Conclusion (22:45 - 23:26)

  • Summary: Two strategies (Scalping for cash flow, Alpha Filter for multipliers) lead to profit. (22:45 - 23:00)
  • Key Requirement: Don't need genius, need Filters, Presets, and Discipline. (23:00 - 23:11)
  • Call to Action: Invites viewers to apply to his private group, "Fortune Inner Circle." (23:12 - 23:21)

Video 6: Exposing Profits the billionarie trader on memecoins by Antonelli

Chapter 1: Introduction & Verification (0:00 - 2:06)

  • Key Insight: The video profiles a 19-year-old crypto trader known as "@FlippingProfits" (or "Profit") who allegedly turned a gaming obsession (Fortnite) into over $50 million by trading memecoins within two years. (0:00 - 0:13)
  • Key Insight: Profit utilizes unique strategies beyond simple scalping or following Crypto Twitter (CT) trends. (0:16 - 0:22)
  • Key Insight: The creator claims to have verified Profit's success by analyzing blockchain data across multiple wallets and blockchains, using tools like Cielo. (0:25 - 1:16)
  • Key Insight: Profit started as a regular gamer (GrandFNF clan) and transitioned to crypto, trading memecoins, Ethereum, and NFTs alongside former gaming friends. (0:43 - 1:02)
  • Verification Proof (Cielo Tool): The video shows analysis using the Cielo platform to track Profit's wallets and performance, presented as evidence of his claimed success. (1:17 - 1:19)
    • Main Solana Wallet ("Profits Main"): Shown with over $23 million in realized PnL (Profit and Loss). (1:19 - 1:21) Notable trades mentioned: Melania, Libra, Trump, Sola, JellyJelly, Boop. (1:25) Over $10 million profit claimed on Melania alone. (1:30 - 1:31)
    • Other Solana Wallets: Several other wallets attributed to Profit are shown with significant PnL figures: $1M ("Profits 1"), $700k ("Profits Old"), $4M, $500k, $1M. (1:32 - 1:47) Emphasized that these wallets are publicly verifiable and linked to him. (1:50)
    • Ethereum Wallet ("Profits ETH"): Shown with over $6.2 million realized profit. (1:52 - 1:56) Highlighted as important because Profit trades across different chains (EVM like Ethereum, and Solana), demonstrating adaptability to narratives on various blockchains. (1:57 - 2:06)

Chapter 2: Profit's Trading Strategies & Tools Overview (2:07 - 3:27)

  • Key Insight: Profit's success is attributed to four main trading styles developed over time:
    1. Size Plays: Large capital deployment in high-conviction trades.
    2. Frontrunning: Anticipating market movements based on specific triggers.
    3. Sniping: Buying newly launched tokens extremely quickly.
    4. Omnichain: Being prepared to trade opportunities across multiple blockchains. (2:15 - 2:21)
  • Key Insight: Profit utilizes advanced tools, some custom-made, setting him apart. He has deep knowledge of Solscan (Solana blockchain explorer) and wallet analysis. (2:25 - 2:44)
  • Tool Focus (Axiom): Profit heavily uses the Axiom trading terminal. (2:49 - 2:51) Reasons cited: considers it the best full trading terminal, uses its perp features, wallet information, and crucially, its large wallet tracking capacity (mentioned as 10,000 wallets later). (2:57 - 3:15) Also uses other tools like Photon, Bloom, Banana Gun. (2:59 - 3:03)

Chapter 3: Strategy Deep Dive - Size Plays (3:28 - 10:30)

  • Definition: Making very large investments ($500k - $1M+) into narratives with extremely high conviction, often capitalizing on rare, obvious opportunities. (3:34 - 3:47)
  • Practical Example 1 (Boop):
    • Context: Hyped launch by "dingaling" (PancakeSwap founder). Contract Address (CA) was public pre-launch. Profit was a seed investor but still decided to deploy significant size at market launch. (5:05 - 5:23)
    • Action: Market bought ~$500k worth of BOOP around $80M market cap at launch, anticipating retail buying pressure as liquidity was added. (5:01, 5:45)
    • Rationale: Knew the founder, hype, public CA, monitored liquidity pool additions. Leveraged on-chain knowledge. (5:21 - 5:30, 6:06)
    • Outcome: ~$450k-500k profit relatively quickly. (3:50, 5:00, 5:47)
  • Practical Example 2 (JellyJelly / Jelly):
    • Context: Identified as a high-conviction play based on team/tokenomics ("bundle 95% supply, fat liq, MMs twap to infinity"). Researched founder (Sam Lessin of Slow Ventures, backed Solana). (6:26 - 7:14)
    • Action: Invested ~$200k, buying heavily around $7-8M market cap. (6:16, 6:24)
    • Rationale: Strong conviction based on team, token structure, and founder's background/connections (Solana backing). (6:26 - 6:55, 7:20)
    • Outcome: ~$570k-600k profit in a short (1-2 hour) trade. (6:14, 7:27)
  • Practical Example 3 (AGIXT):
    • Context: Tech/AI narrative. Researched the project's developers, vision, and backers ("confluence"). Identified strong developer background (Josh XT) via GitHub/LinkedIn. (8:25 - 9:22)
    • Action: Invested $100k around $1-2M market cap. (8:09, 8:21)
    • Rationale: Strong belief in the tech, team's vision, developer's experience, and confluence of supporting wallets/backers. (8:25 - 9:26)
    • Outcome: ~$200k profit. (8:07)
  • Size Play Key Factors Summary: (9:50 - 10:30)
    1. Confluence: Observing significant/smart wallets buying early (via tools, order books).
    2. Catalysts: Identifying future events/narratives that could drive the price higher and timing them.
    3. Conviction: Deep research leading to confidence to deploy large size early, often frontrunning anticipated hype. Checking engagement, non-seed investors, etc.

Chapter 4: Strategy Deep Dive - Frontrunning (10:31 - 18:19)

  • Definition: Trading ahead of expected market movements triggered by specific information or events (e.g., wallet activity, social media posts, CA releases). (11:36 - 11:49)
  • Tool Focus (Dormant Wallet Trackers): Tools like Big Blue Bots (BBB) or InfanTem track wallets that have been inactive for a set period. An inactive (dormant) whale or knowledgeable trader suddenly buying a token (especially an old/dead one) is a strong signal. (13:31 - 14:04)
    • BBB: Mentioned as used by Profit, costs ~$2500/month. (14:24 - 14:31)
    • InfanTem: Presented as a cheaper alternative ($2 SOL/month) offering similar features (dormant feeds, fresh wallet feeds, whale feeds, etc.). (14:38 - 14:58)
  • Practical Example 1 (John Pork):
    • Context: Memecoin that was inactive ("dead") for 10 months. (11:58 - 12:11)
    • Action: Profit used a dormant wallet tracker. Saw a dormant wallet buy John Pork, recognized the signal, and copied the trade using multiple wallets. (13:24 - 13:30, 14:05 - 14:11) Also related to DegenHarambe (Pepe dev) previously mentioning the coin. (12:32 - 12:45)
    • Rationale: Dormant wallet activity signaled potential inside info or a calculated move on a forgotten coin.
    • Outcome: Turned 15 SOL (~$2k-$3k) into over $130k. (14:12 - 14:15)
  • Practical Example 2 (Relign):
    • Context: AI coin, hype launch on Pump.fun. (15:39 - 15:46)
    • Action: Frontran the Contract Address (CA) post. Aped ~$6k total at very low market caps (48k and 72k). (15:51 - 15:55)
    • Rationale: Identified hype, checked tech/Twitter, analyzed holders using Solscan (checking wallet freshness, connections, potential rugs, reused bundles - demonstrated via Orangle Web3 clip 16:32-16:50). Determined it was a likely "professional launch." (16:04 - 17:08)
    • Outcome: Coin reached over $8M market cap, implying significant profit. Traded entry/exit well based on experience. (15:58, 17:09 - 17:19)
  • Frontrunning Summary: Leverages on-chain monitors (dormant/fresh wallets via tools like BBB/InfanTem). Requires deep on-chain sleuthing skills (Solscan, understanding holder patterns, identifying good vs bad launches/bundles). Involves taking calculated risks based on analysis when reward potential is high. (17:39 - 18:19)

Chapter 5: Strategy Deep Dive - Sniping (18:20 - 21:15)

  • Definition: Getting into a token launch within the first few blocks/transactions, requiring speed and often high transaction fees or "bribes." Less viable now than before but still a tool. (18:21 - 18:29)
  • Practical Example (Sola AI):
    • Context: Extremely hyped launch in January; everyone was waiting. (18:34 - 18:39)
    • Action: Profit bought $41k (200 SOL) in the very first transaction after liquidity was added. (18:51, 19:21)
    • Rationale/Method: Used an enormous 565 SOL bribe (~$117k+ at the time) to ensure his transaction was processed first by network validators, getting in before any price increase. (18:58 - 19:04)
    • Outcome: Held for only 14 seconds as the price skyrocketed (already $1.4M MC by 10th transaction), making $1.2 million profit from the initial investment + bribe cost. (19:27 - 19:44, 20:07 - 20:14)
    • Key Lesson: Represents extreme risk-taking, going against conventional wisdom (massive bribe) to secure an edge in a highly competitive scenario. (20:46 - 21:15)

Chapter 6: Strategy Deep Dive - Omnichain Trading (21:16 - 25:13)

  • Definition: Being prepared with capital and knowledge to trade narratives and opportunities across multiple blockchains (Solana, Ethereum, Base, BNB Chain, etc.), even if primarily focused on one. (21:16 - 21:48)
  • Rationale: Crypto is spontaneous; opportunities arise unexpectedly on different chains. Being ready allows capitalizing on them instantly. Missing an opportunity due to lack of funds/preparedness on a specific chain can be costly (creator gives personal example of missing a Base pump 24:18-24:28). Need to be in the 1% that is ready. (24:14 - 24:58)
  • Practical Examples/Scenarios:
    • Caitlyn Jenner Coin (Pump.fun/Solana): Quick flip ($20k -> $250k in 1 min) based on obvious celebrity narrative; requires having SOL ready. (22:09 - 22:19)
    • Political Narratives (Doge, Trump, America Party - mainly ETH): These often perform better on Ethereum due to larger whale presence, more experienced marketing teams, potential for wider engagement (e.g., Mark Cuban, Elon Musk interactions). (22:20 - 23:08) The America Party (AP) coin example showed reaching $40M+ MC on ETH, a level harder to achieve on Solana for such narratives. (22:30 - 23:18)
    • Basis For Everyone (TST - Base): Narrative driven by Base team tweets; requires having funds on Base. (23:25 - 23:36)
    • TST (BNB Chain): Narrative driven by CZ (Binance CEO); requires having funds on BNB Chain. (23:37 - 23:53)
  • Profit's Omnichain Success: His $6.2M+ ETH wallet profit shows the value of being multi-chain ready. Allows capturing large narrative plays that might not occur or perform as well on his primary chain (Solana). (21:49 - 22:02, 23:20 - 24:10)

Chapter 7: Mindset, General Advice & Conclusion (25:14 - End)

  • Restarting Advice (from Profit clip): Focus on memecoin scalping (20-50% gains), constantly network and DM knowledgeable people, join alpha groups. (25:39 - 25:54)
  • Wallet Tracking: Track many wallets (Profit allegedly tracks 724+) but use them for information discovery (finding coins early) rather than blind copy trading. (26:03 - 26:31)
  • Dealing with Volatility: Profit's journey involved significant losses and nearly going broke multiple times. Persistence and learning from experience are key. (26:42 - 27:01)
  • Work Ethic: Profit reportedly works 16+ hours daily, constantly researching, regardless of market conditions. Preserving capital and knowing when not to trade is as important as knowing when to take risks. (27:15 - 27:32)
  • Finding Your Edge: Absolutely critical. Identify a niche or strategy (like Profit's focus on AI, narratives, sniping early on) where you can outperform others. Without an edge, long-term profitability is unlikely. (27:37 - 28:01)
  • Testing Strategies: Experiment with different styles (Size, Frontrunning, Sniping, Omnichain) and tools to find what fits your personality and risk tolerance. (28:02 - 28:18)
  • Contrarian Thinking: Don't blindly follow Crypto Twitter (CT). Profit's success often came from taking unconventional, high-conviction actions that went against the grain (e.g., the massive Sola AI bribe). Trust your research and gut. (28:19 - 28:45)
  • Confidence: Enter trades with conviction based on thorough research. Lack of confidence leads to poor decision-making. (28:46 - 28:53)
  • On-Chain Sleuthing: Mastering blockchain explorers (like Solscan) and analyzing wallet activity, contract deployments, and token distributions is a fundamental skill Profit excels at. Requires significant time and effort. (28:54 - 29:15)
  • Final Mindset (from Profit clip): Maintain gratitude and stay grounded. (29:22 - 29:33)

Video 7: The 6 Trading Styles used in memecoins By BrezTrades

Chapter 1: Introduction (00:00 - 00:47)

  • Key Insight: Memecoins have seen a massive rise in popularity, driven by stories of inexperienced traders turning small amounts of money (e.g., $100) into millions (00:01 - 00:09).
  • Key Insight: The video's purpose is to provide a blueprint for the six main trading styles that are currently effective, each supported by a real-world example of a trader who has made millions with that specific style (00:35 - 00:43).

Chapter 2: Trading Style 1: Scalping (00:48 - 02:49)

  • Definition: Scalping is a high-frequency trading style focused on making small, fast profits from tiny price jumps. It's defined by speed, timing, and trading volume, often on brand-new pairs (01:00 - 01:15, 02:22).
  • Strategy: Scalpers aim for consistency, compounding hundreds of small wins per day. The goal is to profit regardless of overall market volume (01:11, 02:25). They use minimal filters to see every new coin launch, attempting to buy at extremely low market caps (e.g., $6k) and sell at slightly higher ones (e.g., $15k-$30k) (02:02 - 02:11).
  • Key Requirement: You must be able to "adapt with the meta" (the current market trends); failing to do so will lead to losses (02:14).
  • Downside: This style requires a "very, very high time commitment." (02:30).
  • Practical Example (Trader: Cupsey):
    • The video shows Cupsey's wallet on the cielo analytics platform (01:16).
    • Wallet Stats: Over 6,000 tokens traded in one month (01:22).
    • Wallet Stats: A median hold time of only 12 seconds (01:25).
    • Wallet Stats: A 70% win rate (01:26).
    • Analysis: The speaker scrolls through Cupsey's trades, noting that the individual Return on Investment (ROI) percentages are low (e.g., 15-30%), but these small gains add up to significant profit when compounded hundreds of times (01:30, 01:46).
  • Practical Example (Tools):
    • The speaker recommends a fast trading bot like Axiom Pro to get the "fastest fills on new pairs" (01:52).
    • The Axiom "New Pairs" category is shown as the primary tool for finding these coins (02:02).

Chapter 3: Trading Style 2: Size & Belief Trading (Long-Term Hold) (02:50 - 07:02)

  • Definition: This style is the opposite of scalping. It involves being a "belief trader" who holds a small, highly selective number of coins for a very long time, "sizing in" (investing large amounts) on coins they have deep conviction in (02:54, 03:34).
  • Strategy: Success is not about high frequency but about high conviction. This style requires finding "big runners" and holding them through extreme volatility to achieve massive percentage gains (03:39). Intel comes from building a strong following list on Twitter and Telegram, not from scanning new pairs (03:50 - 04:18).
  • Downside & Risk: This style requires a very large starting portfolio because it involves taking "very, very big losses." It is not recommended for beginners, as you can lose hundreds of thousands of dollars on a single trade (04:26 - 04:51).
  • Practical Example (Trader: Degen Pow):
    • The video shows Degen Pow's yum.sol wallet on cielo (03:00).
    • Contrast: Pow has only ~1,200 trades in his career, whereas Cupsey (the scalper) had 6,500 in a month (03:26).
    • Major Wins: The wallet shows massive profits, including over $12 million on TRUMP, $3 million on PEANUT, and $3 million on PASTERNAK (03:03 - 03:10).
    • Major Losses: The same wallet shows huge losses, such as $730,000 on LIBRA, $630,000 on GOAT, and $500,000 on AGI6Z (04:35 - 04:40).
  • Practical Example (Strategy):
    • Thesis: The speaker shows a long, detailed "thesis" (investment rationale) that Pow wrote for a coin, detailing future catalysts, why people aren't buying it yet ("friction"), and what will cause future FOMO (06:08 - 06:39).
    • Conviction: The speaker highlights the PEANUT trade, where Pow held even when he was down over 70% and facing widespread FUD (Fear, Uncertainty, Doubt). He "blocked out the noise" and it resulted in an $11 million profit (06:42 - 06:55).

Chapter 4: Trading Style 3: The Daily Runner Hunter (07:03 - 08:40)

  • Definition: A hybrid style that is "pretty similar to Cupsey" (scalping) but aims to "hold the daily runners much, much more" (07:10 - 07:13).
  • Strategy: The goal is to hit a "1 million, 2 million, 3 million runner with conviction" (07:16). This involves "piecing together narratives" and trading price action (PA) on coins that are already running, rather than just brand-new pairs. They get in "low with small size" and aim for high percentage gains (07:58, 08:10).
  • Downside: Like scalping, it requires a very high time commitment ("12-14 hours a day... very minimum") (08:28). It is "hit and miss" and less consistent than pure scalping (08:33).
  • Practical Example (Trader: "Yurus" / DfMx...Xhzj):
    • The trader's cielo wallet is shown (07:34).
    • Wallet Stats: The wallet shows numerous high-percentage gains, such as 2400%, 1000%, and 2500% (07:39 - 07:54).
    • Example Trade: A 2400% gain from buying $4,000 worth of a coin at a $77,000 market cap (07:41).

Chapter 5: Trading Style 4: Tweet Catching (CT Tracker) (08:41 - 11:37)

  • Definition: A "very, very consistent" style that involves only buying coins based on tweets from influential figures on "Crypto Twitter" (CT) (08:48 - 08:56).
  • Strategy: This style relies on speed and a "CT Tracker" tool to be notified instantly when an influencer tweets about a coin. The risk/reward is excellent because you can get in at a very low market cap (e.g., 8k) with limited downside (~30% loss) but massive upside (20x+ potential) in minutes (09:38 - 09:51).
  • Key Requirement: You must be able to assess the narrative's potential and "get out fast, but not jeeting (selling too early)" (10:37 - 10:42).
  • Practical Example (General):
    • Tool: The video shows the Axiom platform's free "CT Tracker," which provides instant alerts and lists of traders to track (09:57 - 10:08).
    • Trade: The speaker analyzes a "SuperTrump" coin, showing its chart where it pumped from "zero to... 600,000" market cap in two minutes. He notes a trader named "DV" made 258 SOL on this trade (09:13 - 09:33).
  • Practical Example (Trader: Clukz):
    • The video shows Clukz's cielo wallet, stating he "basically only apes tweets" (10:14, 10:28).
    • Example Trade: Clukz turned $6,000 into $133,000 on the AMERICA coin (10:18 - 10:21).
    • Catalyst: The AMERICA coin was created after an Elon Musk tweet about creating an "America Party." Clukz got in at a $110k market cap and sold at an average of $2 million (10:56 - 11:07).

Chapter 6: Trading Style 5: AI/Tech Coin Narrative Trading (11:38 - 13:14)

  • Definition: This style focuses on trading coins within a specific, strong "narrative," such as the AI and Tech coin trend. These coins are often seen as more legitimate because "they actually have a use" and aren't just memes (11:39, 12:17).
  • Strategy: The key to this style is performing deep due diligence, specifically by checking the "dev funding wallets" to ensure the project is not a scam (12:23).
  • Practical Example (Trader: Flipping Profits):
    • The video shows the "Profits Main" wallet on cielo with $23.6 million in PnL (11:50 - 11:52).
    • Analysis: The speaker points out that (aside from political coins) the wallet's "massive hits" are all "different types of AI and tech coins," such as SOLA AI, JELLY JELLY, and BOOP (12:03 - 12:12).
  • Practical Example (How to Check Dev Wallets):
    1. Tool: Use a platform like Axiom to find the "dev funded from" wallet (12:31).
    2. Tool: Click the transaction to open Solscan (12:37).
    3. Analysis: On Solscan, look for a "little green thing" (a tag) next to the funding wallet's address. This tag "means this wallet has deployed a coin before" (12:41 - 12:44).
    4. Red Flag: If that previous coin "rugged" (scammed), and the new coin is pretending to be a legit AI project, it's a "very, very bearish" sign that the "deployer isn't legit" (12:45 - 12:56).

Chapter 7: Trading Style 6: TikTok / Attention Frontrunning (13:15 - 16:30)

  • Definition: This style "takes the least amount of time" and is ideal for those "already active on all social media" (13:17, 13:26).
  • Strategy: The goal is to "know where attention is and when trends form" on platforms like TikTok and Twitter, and then "front run the trend" by finding a memecoin created about it (13:34, 14:33).
  • Mindset: This is a high-volume, high-risk/reward strategy. These traders "will shoot 50, 100, 200 shots" at tiny market caps (10k-20k). They accept many small losses, knowing that "one coin that hits to 5 million will pay off for all their small losses" (15:53 - 16:03).
  • Practical Example (Group: FNF Group):
    • The video shows a graphic from this group highlighting two successful trades: $ROGER ($130k PnL) and $LORE ($146k PnL) (13:45 - 13:49).
  • Practical Example (Trade: $ROGER):
    • Catalyst: The coin was based on a viral TikTok trend about an animal named Roger that had died (14:10 - 14:18).
    • Analysis: The traders found this trend "very, very early." The coin took almost a day to gain traction ("bond") and then "peaked at almost 5 million market cap," netting huge returns for early buyers (14:30 - 14:50).
  • Practical Example (Trade: $LORE):
    • Catalyst: This was a "different form of attention" based on a "singular Twitter post" from the user "Moon Dragon" that went "dum dum viral" with almost 1 billion views (15:06 - 15:18).
    • Analysis: The coin "topped at over 8 million market cap" (15:37).

Chapter 8: Conclusion: How to Pick Your Style (16:31 - 17:21)

  • Key Insight: There is no single "best" style. To find yours, you must ask (16:33 - 16:45):
    1. How much capital do you have?
    2. How long have you been in the trenches (experience)?
    3. How many trades do you want to take per day?
    4. How many hours can you commit?
    5. What are you naturally good at?
  • Final Advice: Trading is "one of the most personalized things" (16:57). The best way to succeed is to "try out every single thing" until you find what you are good at, and then "abuse it over and over and over again" (17:04 - 17:12).

Video 8: More Streategies From Other traders memecoins small traders OUTDATED

Chapter 1: Introduction & Strategy Overview (0:00 - 0:24)

  • Key Insight: The video introduces a low-risk, easy-to-do memecoin trading strategy. (0:00)
  • Key Insight: The core strategy involves trading memecoin futures (perpetuals). (0:13)
  • Key Insight: Futures trading allows making profit from price increases (longing) and price decreases (shorting). The video focuses on shorting. (0:13)

Chapter 2: Platforms & Tools Mentioned (0:25 - 0:38 & throughout)

  • Key Insight: Several platforms are used/mentioned for this strategy:
    • Quonto: A primary DEX for trading perpetuals (shown with BTC chart). (0:25)
    • Aster: Another DEX highlighted for perpetuals, spot trading, and specific opportunities (shown with ASTER chart). (0:28, 17:57)
    • MexC: Mentioned as another exchange option. (0:27 - implicitly mentioned alongside others)
    • Axiom: A platform frequently shown, appearing to be used for discovering new tokens, tracking pairs ("New Pairs," "Final Stretch," "Migrated"), and viewing charts/basic trading. (0:14, 0:37, and throughout)
    • Bubble Maps: A tool (shown integrated or visited via Axiom) to visualize token holder distribution and identify potential concentration or manipulation ("bundling"). (3:20)
    • RSI (Relative Strength Index): A technical indicator used to identify overbought (>70) or oversold (<30) conditions, helping time entries/exits. (6:56)
    • Specific Buy/Sell Indicator: An unnamed indicator showing green 'B' (buy) and red 'S' (sell) signals on the chart is demonstrated. (14:22)

Chapter 3: The Shorting Strategy Explained (Core Concepts)

  • Key Insight: The fundamental premise is that most memecoins lack long-term value and tend to decrease significantly ("go down into nothing") after initial hype or pumps. (Implied throughout, e.g., 1:09-1:26)
  • Key Insight: Shorting these coins, especially after large price increases or when identified as fundamentally weak (e.g., high bundling), presents a high probability trade. (Implied, demonstrated in examples)
  • Key Insight: This strategy is presented as less competitive and requiring less precise timing ("skill gap") than buying newly launched tokens ("sniping"). (1:30 - 2:28)
  • Key Insight: Recommended risk management involves using low leverage (1x-2x maximum suggested) to avoid easy liquidation on volatile price swings. (12:57 - 13:03)
  • Key Insight: Potential short entry points can be identified using:
    • Technical indicators like RSI showing overbought conditions. (7:03)
    • Reaching significant psychological market cap levels (e.g., $1M, $5M, $10M, $50M, $100M) where sell pressure often increases. (9:38)
    • Fundamental analysis (e.g., using Bubble Maps to spot high holder concentration/bundling). (3:20)
    • Narrative fading or negative sentiment shifts. (Implied with DEJ/Moonpig examples)

Chapter 4: Practical Examples & Walkthroughs

  • Example 1: DEJ Coin Analysis (3:11 - 5:40, 6:45 - 7:30, 9:38 - 9:50)
    • Description: The speaker analyzes the DEJ/USD chart on Axiom, highlighting its pump and subsequent dump. They use Bubble Maps (3:20) to show holder concentration, calling it a "bundled scam." Later, they add the RSI indicator (6:56) and point out overbought signals (around 7:04, 7:23) near price peaks that would have indicated good short entries. They also mention key market cap levels (9:38) as resistance zones.
    • Knowledge: Demonstrates using chart patterns (pump & dump), on-chain tools (Bubble Maps), and technical indicators (RSI) to identify a potentially fraudulent or overhyped token as a short candidate. Shows how RSI overbought signals align with price tops. Reinforces looking for entries at key market cap milestones.
  • Example 2: Bing Coin Chart (5:41 - 6:27)
    • Description: The speaker briefly shows the Bing/USD chart on Axiom, pointing out another pump-and-dump pattern typical of memecoins.
    • Knowledge: Reinforces the visual pattern recognition aspect of the strategy.
  • Example 3: Departcore Chart (6:26 - 6:38)
    • Description: A quick look at the Departcore/USD chart on Axiom, again showcasing a sharp rise and fall.
    • Knowledge: Further visual reinforcement of the common memecoin price pattern suitable for shorting.
  • Example 4: Moonpig Coin Analysis (9:51 - 11:34)
    • Description: The speaker analyzes the MOONPIG/USD chart on Axiom, noting its extreme pump to $120M market cap followed by a crash. They mention the associated narrative (a trader losing money) and point out overbought RSI conditions near the peak (10:01).
    • Knowledge: Illustrates how extreme valuations and overbought technicals on memecoins create high-probability short setups. Shows sentiment/narrative can play a role.
  • Example 5: Placing a Short on TROLL (Quonto) (11:44 - 13:03)
    • Description: The speaker navigates to the TROLL/USD perpetual contract on Quonto. They demonstrate the process of setting up a market short order: entering the desired position size in USD (e.g., $443) and, crucially, adjusting the leverage down from the default (e.g., 5x) to a safer level like 1x or 2x.
    • Knowledge: Provides a step-by-step visual guide on how to execute a short trade on a DEX (Quonto), emphasizing the critical step of managing risk by setting low leverage.
  • Example 6: RYNA Coin Analysis (with Indicator) (14:18 - 17:28)
    • Description: The speaker analyzes the RYNA/USD chart on Axiom, adding a specific buy/sell indicator (14:22). They point out how the red 'S' (sell) signals align with price tops (e.g., 14:34, 14:46, 16:35), suggesting good short entries. They also discuss trading based on the chart/technicals rather than the emotional narrative surrounding the coin.
    • Knowledge: Shows how specific technical indicators (beyond RSI) can be integrated into the strategy to identify potential entry/exit points. Reinforces the importance of detaching emotion from trading decisions.
  • Example 7: BOSS Coin Chart (16:06 - 16:24)
    • Description: A brief display of the BOSS/USD chart on Axiom, showing another significant price drop after a pump.
    • Knowledge: One more visual example reinforcing the core pattern.

Chapter 5: Aster Platform Opportunity (Points & Airdrop Farming) (17:57 - 24:39)

  • Key Insight: Aster is presented as a promising platform, potentially undervalued compared to competitors like Hyperliquid. (Implied)
  • Key Insight: Aster features "dark orders" or hidden liquidity pools, which can attract larger traders concerned about manipulation (unlike Hyperliquid, according to the speaker). (Implied comparison)
  • Key Insight: Aster currently has a points program (Stage 2) rewarding users for trading volume, profit/loss, and referrals. These points are expected to convert into an ASTR token airdrop. (22:26)
  • Key Insight: Participating in the points program by trading on Aster (potentially using the shorting strategy) could lead to a valuable airdrop, similar to the historical success of the Hyperliquid airdrop. (22:26, comparison implied)
  • Practical Example: The speaker navigates Aster's interface, showing the Referral section (22:08), the Stage 2 Genesis / Team / Points dashboard (22:24), explaining the points calculation breakdown (trade, PnL, referral points), the team structure, and the leaderboard (23:54).
    • Knowledge: Demonstrates how to access and understand Aster's points and referral system. Outlines the strategy of "farming" the airdrop by actively trading on the platform and potentially joining/building a team to maximize point accumulation.

Chapter 6: Market Context & Mindset (Interspersed)

  • Key Insight: The crypto market, especially memecoins, operates heavily on attention and hype ("attention market"). Trends shift quickly. (2:00 - 2:28, implied throughout)
  • Key Insight: Trading requires detaching emotions. Don't trade based on feelings about a coin's narrative; focus on technicals, fundamentals (like holder distribution), and market dynamics. (15:05 - 15:40)
  • Key Insight: Market conditions fluctuate. September is often slow, while Q4 (Oct-Dec) is historically stronger for crypto. Adapting strategy to market conditions is important. (8:10 - 8:40)

Chapter 7: Conclusion (24:40 - End)

  • Key Insight: The video concludes by reiterating the potential of the shorting strategy and the specific opportunity presented by the Aster platform and its upcoming airdrop.
  • Call to Action: Encourages viewers to subscribe and potentially use the provided links (implied for referrals/sign-ups). (26:30)

Video 9: Antonelli Interview About Memecoins

Chapter 1: Introduction & Getting Started

  • Key Insight: The interviewee, Antonyelli, is a 17-year-old trader who emphasizes that he has not "made it" yet but has gained significant experience from grinding, taking major wins and losses, and connecting with other insane traders , . His goal is to share the knowledge he has gained from this process.
  • Key Insight: He clarifies that having the knowledge of what makes a good trader is different from applying it, which he sees as the hardest part and what he works on daily .
  • Practical Example (How he started): Antonyelli first learned about crypto (specifically Bitcoin) years ago but didn't dive deep . His real entry point was in November/December 2024, when a friend told him to check out Pump.fun during the bull run . He spent months just observing from the sidelines without trading , watching the prime bull market, and only started actively trading with his own money in June .

Chapter 2: Why Solana Memecoins? The Gamer Connection

  • Key Insight: Antonyelli was motivated to trade memecoins after seeing his former competitive Fortnite friends successfully transition into crypto and make significant gains , . His thought was, "if they could do it, then why can't I?" .
  • Key Insight: He admits that at the start, it seems like a "get-rich-quick scheme," but clarifies that is not the case , .
  • Key Insight: The reason so many gamers (especially Fortnite players) become good traders is their ability to "grind" for long hours . He states that to succeed in the beginning, you have to be online 10-12 hours a day . For most people, this is a huge barrier, but for gamers accustomed to 12-hour sessions, "that's a breeze" , . Reflexes are also a factor, especially for "tweet plays" .
  • Practical Example (Gamer Success): He cites the example of "Boougga," the Fortnite World Cup winner. Boougga allegedly put $600 into a coin and made $2 million on a single trade, despite having no prior crypto experience . He also mentions another player, "Scented," who reportedly made 100k in his first two weeks .

Chapter 3: The Grind & Life Balance

  • Key Insight: When it comes to balancing daily life with trading, Antonyelli is blunt: "there's no balance" . He states that in the grinding stage, you must make sacrifices and "lock in on one thing" .
  • Key Insight: You must be online constantly because a "runner" (a coin that pumps significantly) can appear at any time, whether it's 4:00 AM, 1:00 AM, or 9:00 PM , . If you're only on for a few hours, you'll miss it.
  • Key Insight: The ultimate goal is not to trade 10 hours a day forever. The goal is to make money and "get out" to fulfill your "why" (e.g., provide for family, live your desired life) , . He contrasts this with traders who make a lot of money but unwisely continue to grind all day instead of enjoying their life by making fewer, larger, high-conviction "size plays" .
  • Key Insight: Regarding privacy, he notes that his mom knows what he does but not how much he wins or loses . He strongly advises never to tell anyone how much money you make .

Chapter 4: Mindset: Action, Process, and Reality

  • Key Insight: "Actions speak way louder than words" . Many people say they want to get rich, but they don't take the necessary action.
  • Practical Example (Action vs. Words): He uses an analogy: "if words spoke louder than actions... I would get a loose leaf and write down 'I'm a millionaire' 10,000 times... and then magically I would become a millionaire. But that's not how it works" .
  • Key Insight: He shares a crucial piece of advice he tells himself: "Stop falling in love with the results, but fall in love with the process to get towards those results" . Focusing only on the results can make you fall into a "fake reality" .

Chapter 5: Skill vs. Luck in Trading

  • Key Insight: Antonyelli believes trading is "definitely skill" but that "every single trade you do there's a bit of luck" . Luck is an unpredictable event, like a whale (a "gake") buying right after you .
  • Key Insight: The difference between skill and luck is the thought process . If you can explain why you entered a coin, why you exited, and why you took profits, it's skill . If you are just gambling, buying every coin you see, and one hits, that's pure luck .
  • Practical Example (A Big Win): He describes his biggest win. He put 4 Solana (SOL) into a coin at a 6-7k market cap and sold at 180-200k . He identifies the "skill" part of this trade as using "informational asymmetry" (knowing info before others) . He saw the coin in "new pairs," clicked it very early , and quickly identified that it fit a strong "streaming narrative" that was popular at the time , . This conviction led him to buy immediately.

Chapter 6: Strategy for Newcomers (Low Portfolio)

  • Key Insight: For traders with a "low port" (small portfolio), the primary goal is not to make money. The primary goal is capital preservation: "I don't want to lose my current port" , .
  • Key Insight: "No trade is still a trade" . It is better to be break-even at the end of the day than to be down even one dollar, because being down means you lost .
  • Practical Example (The "$1 Strategy"): He says the biggest mistake new traders make is using too much money while they are still learning. His advice, which he wishes he took, is to "trade with $1" . When you start, your goal is to build a skill and intuition for the market, not to make money . By trading with $1 or $2, you are practicing (like paper trading) with an amount that doesn't affect you. You can lose 50 cents and learn a lesson .
  • Practical Example (His First Loss): He contrasts this with his own start. He sold his PC for $500, put it all into crypto, and it was "gone" , . He says this was the equivalent of "putting $500 on Black" at a casino because he was trying to build a skill while using money he couldn't afford to lose , .

Chapter 7: Essential Tools & Tactics

  • Key Insight: The most important tool is a "CT tracker" (Crypto Twitter tracker) . He recommends "Exento" .
  • Practical Example (How a CT Tracker Works): A Twitter monitor shows you tweets from all the important/influential people on crypto Twitter . This is crucial for "tweet plays." For example, "Elon Musk posts a dog, that coin's ripping" .
  • Key Insight (DCA): Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA) is a valid strategy if you genuinely believe in the coin's narrative and think it can go higher , . The fundamental way to make money is buying low and selling higher .
  • Practical Example (Bad DCA): He admits his own weakness is doing a "DCA of doom" —not because he believes in the coin, but because he's emotionally trying to lower his entry price, which he advises not to do .

Chapter 8: Emotional Control (Pumps, Crashes, & FOMO)

  • Key Insight (Pumps): When you see a "fat candle" (a big pump) and you are in profit, you must "take P" (take profit) . Even if it's just 10% or 20%, you need to reward yourself. That is the entire point of trading .
  • Key Insight (Crashes/Dips): You must understand that sell-offs are normal . People who bought at 20k will sell at 130k, causing a dip .
  • Key Insight (Losses): You cannot always be right. Losses are 100% normal , . The best traders do not have an 80% win rate . The key is to cut your losses and not hold to zero .
  • Key Insight (FOMO): His self-admitted biggest weakness is FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) .
  • Practical Example (FOMO Loss): He describes a common and costly mistake: "I buy low and I sold low and then it pumps high and then I want to buy again" . He identifies this pattern as the cause of his biggest loss .

Chapter 9: Advice, Future Vision & Market Predictions

  • Key Insight (Advice to Young Traders): His main advice is to "just keep showing up" . If you want it bad enough, it will work out . He also emphasizes that a huge part of his knowledge comes from the connections he's built by talking to major influencers and multi-millionaire traders , .
  • Key Insight (Future Vision): He will always be in crypto/finance but hopes to transition away from 10-hour/day grinding to "swing trading" or larger, less frequent trades , .
  • Key Insight (Market Prediction): He believes memecoins are here to stay, and that "all roads lead back to Solana" , . While other metas on other chains (like BNB, XPL) will pop up, they will be temporary, and the main ecosystem will remain on Solana , .

Chapter 10: The Single Most Important Habit

  • Key Insight: The final and most important piece of advice is to journal your mistakes , .
  • Practical Example (The Insanity of Repetition): He identifies his biggest problem was repeating the same mistake and expecting a different result . "If I keep smashing my wall and expect a diamond to come out, it's like what am I going for?" . If you don't journal, you will get stuck in a loop: blow your balance, redeposit, blow your balance, redeposit... and you will never learn why .
  • Practical Example (How to Journal): When you take a loss, you must physically write down what happened and what you should have done instead (e.g., "I shouldn't have done that, I'm an idiot, I should have waited for this, I should have bought here") . He says it's scientifically proven that writing things down retains the information better in your head .

Chapter 7: Advice for New Traders & Market Future

Here, they provide direct advice for new traders with small portfolios and speculate on the future of the Solana launchpad meta.

Key Insights:

  • Profit's Advice (Sub-50 SOL): Set 60% of your portfolio aside. Use the remaining 40% to "trade like Cupsy" (i.e., fast, small-cap flips) .
  • Cupsey's Advice (Sub-50 SOL): Emphasizes "putting in the time" and wanting it more than others. He advises new traders to "dive deep" into finding wallets and figuring out what's happening on-chain. With a small portfolio, you must be "careful with entries and FOMO" and "play it safe" until you build a working strategy .
  • Future of Pump.fun vs. Bonk: Cupsey believes Pump.fun can "100% come back" . He states the answer is simple: they "just need to create runners." He suggests they need to interact with communities and "inject funds into their coins" to create 10-30 million market cap runners, which would flip sentiment "so quick" , .

Chapter 8: Building Tools & Final Thoughts

The interview concludes with a discussion on why they don't build their own trading tools and their final sign-offs.

Key Insights:

  • Building vs. Trading: They discuss why they don't build their own trading bots or platforms. Profit states he "would not give up all the sauce" that would be required to make a course or tool .
  • Example of a Trader-Builder: They shout out "It" as a trader who successfully built his own bot, which is "crazy" and allows him to find and sneak into "crime coins" early , .

Video 10: Trading On Bnb Strategies by InsyderCrypto

Chapter 1: The Core Strategy: "Tweet Sniping"

The video's central thesis is a trading strategy called "meta sniping" or "tweet sniping," which involves reacting instantly to social media posts from high-influence, Binance-related Twitter (X) accounts.

  • (00:38) The method is defined as "sniping CZ or Binance related narratives or tweets early."
  • (00:47) The speaker clarifies this doesn't mean manually watching a screen all day.
  • (00:58) The strategy relies on using a specific tool, Uxento, to receive instant, audible (sound) notifications when one of these target accounts tweets.
  • (01:17) The goal is to wait for a "good tweet" to drop, identify the coin name from the tweet's narrative, and be among the first to buy it on the recommended trading platform, GMGN.
  • (13:52) The coins that "run the hardest" are those based on new tweets from real, official accounts (like BNB Chain, Binance Futures, etc.).
  • (14:18) The tweet's content is critical. A random phrase won't work. It needs to be "something good" and "interesting," such as the announcement of a new platform, a new mascot, or anything narrative-driven (like a "dog").

Chapter 2: Practical Example #1: The $2,500 "WishDog" Trade

The speaker breaks down the exact trade that earned him $2,500 in two minutes, which involved two separate transactions on two different versions of the same coin.

Trade 1: The New Coin (Profit: ~$1,500)

  • (01:40) A tweet was posted by the "Binance Futures" account (which he was monitoring).
  • (01:46) The tweet's text included the phrase "Our Wish Dog..."
  • (01:54) The speaker immediately went to the "Trenches" (new pairs) view on the GMGN platform and saw a new coin named "WishDog" had just been created.
  • (02:18) He "blasted" (bought) the new coin. The price "ripped" (increased rapidly) almost instantly.
  • (02:28) He sold for a profit of approximately $1,500. He notes that he sold too early, as the coin continued to multiply in value after he exited.

Trade 2: The "OG" Coin (Profit: ~$1,000)

  • (02:48) After the first trade, the speaker had an idea: "What if there's an OG [original] coin?"
  • (02:52) Practical Step: He used the search bar on GMGN to look for "WishDog" and checked the "Migrated" filter to find older versions.
  • (02:55) He found an older coin (ticker: WISHDOOG) that had launched 80 days prior.
  • (03:00) He analyzed its chart and saw it had a small initial pump (from the new tweet's hype) and was now in a dip.
  • (03:10) He bought this dip. The coin then proceeded to do a 2x (double in value).
  • (03:14) He sold the "OG" coin for an additional profit of $1,000.
  • (03:26) These two trades combined, reacting to a single tweet, resulted in the $2,500 profit.

Chapter 3: Platform Setup: GMGN Trading Platform

The video provides a full guide on setting up the recommended trading platform, GMGN.

  • (04:16) The speaker states that GMGN is the "best platform to trade BNB coins."
  • (04:29) Practical Step: After signing up, the first step is to select the correct network. He shows how to switch from the default (SOL) to "BSC" (Binance Smart Chain) in the top-right corner.
  • (04:36) Practical Step: To fund the account, you go to your "Wallet," click "Deposit," and send BNB to the provided wallet address.
  • (04:45) Practical Step (Bridging): If your funds are on another chain (e.g., Solana), he demonstrates using a third-party service called "changenow.io" to swap a token like SOL for BNB and have it sent directly to your GMGN deposit address.

Chapter 4: Key Settings: Fees & Filters

This is the most knowledge-dense part of the video, explaining the exact settings required for both sniping and regular trading.

Trade Setting Presets (P1 vs. P2) The platform uses presets (P1, P2, P3) for different trading styles.

  • (07:24) Practical Example (P1 - "Snipe" Settings): This preset is for "quick buying" new launches from the "Trenches" view. It is high-risk and uses high fees to ensure your transaction is first.

    • Slippage Limit: 80% (or even 100%).
    • Gas (Gwei): 100 (which he says costs ~$40) to guarantee the trade. He says 10-25 Gwei may also work for a lower fee.
    • Anti-MEV RPC: Must be turned ON.
  • (08:50) Practical Example (P2 - "Normal Trading" Settings): This preset is for all other trading, such as when you open a coin's chart to buy a dip.

    • Buy Settings:
      • Slippage Limit: 50%
      • Gas (Gwei): 15 (a "standard amount" costing ~$4)
      • Anti-MEV RPC: ON
    • Sell Settings:
      • Slippage Limit: 50%
      • Gas (Gwei): 25 (he sets sell gas higher to ensure his sales go through)
      • Anti-MEV RPC: OFF (he states it's not needed for selling)

Filter Settings Filters are used to clean the "Trenches" view and hide "garbage" coins.

  • (10:40) Practical Example (General Filter): This filter is for finding active, recently launched coins.

    • Max Age: 30-60 minutes
    • Min Market Cap: $12,000 (entered as "12")
    • Min Top 1h Vol: 12k
  • (13:10) Practical Example (Sniper Filter): A more aggressive filter used to see only brand-new coins for the tweet-sniping strategy.

    • Max Age: 7-8 minutes
    • Min Market Cap: $9,000 (entered as "9")

Chapter 5: Tool Setup: Uxento Tweet Notifications

This section details how to set up the notification tool that powers the entire strategy.

  • (14:55) The tool is the web app "Uxento" (uxento.io).
  • (15:22) Practical Step: The speaker shows his setup: the Uxento web app is opened in a separate browser tab, placed in a split-screen view next to the GMGN platform.
  • (15:38) Practical Step: The most important feature is in Settings > Custom CT Accounts.
  • (15:42) He adds the specific Twitter (X) handles he wants to monitor. The handles he adds in the video are:
    • cz_binance
    • binance
    • binance_intern
    • bnbchain
    • aster_dex
    • four_meme
    • BinanceFutures
  • (15:45) For each account, he assigns a "Sound". This makes the browser play an audible alert the instant one of those accounts tweets.
  • (17:03) Workflow Recap: You can now do other things. When you hear the sound notification, you check the tweet in Uxento. If it's a good narrative, you immediately switch to GMGN and use your P1 "Snipe" settings to buy the coin.

Chapter 6: Practical Example #2: The Risk of Fake Tweets ("Smily")

The speaker provides a second example to illustrate the market's volatility and the risks of fake narratives.

  • (17:39) A coin named "Smily" appeared and rapidly pumped to a $130,000 market cap.
  • (17:42) This was a "complete fake coin" built on a fake narrative.
  • (18:13) Scammers created a fake tweet from a fake account ("Tony") and a fake YouTube video, pretending the coin was a new AI project from Binance's "Giggle Academy."
  • (18:24) The hype was so strong that "everybody just blasted it" (bought it), even though it was fake.
  • (18:27) The speaker notes he identified it as fake and did not buy, but uses it as an example of how much volume and speculative interest is on the BNB chain, where even fake news can cause a massive, albeit risky, pump.

Video 11: HandsomeFinance Explains How he trades on BSC

Chapter 1: The BNB Meme Coin Thesis

The video argues that a significant new trend is emerging, shifting focus from Solana-based meme coins (like those on Pump.fun) to meme coins on the BNB Smart Chain (BSC).

  • Insight: Top traders are reportedly making over $600,000 in 30 days by trading meme coins on the BNB chain (00:00).
  • Insight: The speaker posits that "Pump.fun is dying," showing a Dune Analytics chart where its daily revenue and volume are declining (01:43).
  • Insight: In contrast, a BNB-based meme coin platform is shown with exponential growth. Dune Analytics charts show its key metrics (Unique Users, Unique Creators, All Time Volume) exploding upwards starting around September-October 2025 (00:33 - 01:15).
  • Insight: This trend is supported by a "wealth effect" from BNB's all-time high price (shown at $1,295) (01:17). The theory is that investors who profited from BNB are now taking those profits and deploying them into riskier assets on the same ecosystem: BNB meme coins (01:25).
  • Insight: A major catalyst for this new wave is the Chinese crypto market. The speaker claims this community did not fully participate in previous meme coin seasons, has its own unique meme culture, and has a cultural affinity for Binance and BNB (01:54 - 02:18).

Chapter 2: The "Hard Way": Getting Started & Manual Trading Strategy

The speaker outlines the "hard way" to get started, which involves manual setup, funding, and research. This section contains several practical, step-by-step examples.

  • Insight: The speaker's recommended 3-step manual process is: 1. Use the "Padre" trading tool, 2. Fund it using "deBridge," and 3. "Check top Traders" (02:22, 03:54).

  • Practical Example 1: Setting up the Padre Trading Tool (02:25 - 03:02)

    • The video introduces "Padre" as the central trading platform, which functions as a bot or advanced interface.
    • The speaker notes a key feature is its multi-wallet capability, allowing you to manage your own wallets and track others (02:44).
    • Action: To begin, the speaker navigates the Padre interface and copies his new, empty wallet address to the clipboard, preparing to fund it (02:56).
  • Practical Example 2: Funding the Wallet via deBridge (03:03 - 03:52)

    • This example shows how to bridge funds from another blockchain (Solana) to the BNB Smart Chain.
    • Action 1: The user goes to the "deBridge" application (03:03).
    • Action 2: He sets up a cross-chain swap, selecting "SOL" (Solana) as the asset to "You pay" (03:16) and "BNB" (on the BNB Chain) as the asset to "You receive" (03:21).
    • Action 3: He inputs the amount (2 SOL) (03:27) and pastes the "Padre" wallet address (copied in the previous step) into the "Trade and Send to Another Address" field (03:30).
    • Action 4: He approves the transaction in his personal wallet (a Backpack wallet is shown) (03:39).
    • Result: The transaction is broadcast and confirmed in under 5 seconds (03:41). The speaker then returns to Padre, showing the new BNB balance (0.298 BNB) has arrived in his trading wallet (03:48).
  • Practical Example 3: Finding & Copy-Trading Top Wallets (03:55 - 06:08)

    • This example demonstrates the third step: finding profitable traders and tracking their activity.
    • Action 1 (Discovery): The speaker goes to bsc.stalkchain.com (04:27), a "KOL" (Key Opinion Leader) leaderboard. He scrolls the list, analyzing PNL, ROI, and win rates. He decides to track a wallet named "CryptoCharming" due to its high 70.22% win rate (05:03).
    • Action 2 (Tracking): He clicks the "CryptoCharming" profile and copies its wallet address (05:08). He returns to the "Padre" tool, navigates to the "Wallet Manager" (05:05), clicks "Add wallet" (05:10), and pastes the address, giving it a name and an emoji.
    • Action 3 (Monitoring & Trading): The "CryptoCharming" wallet is now in his Padre list (05:22). He can click it to see its live trades and positions. He clicks a token that the wallet is holding (05:28) to analyze it.
    • Action 4 (Risk Management): While on the token's chart in Padre, he demonstrates advanced trading features. He highlights the "Sell" button's advanced options, specifically "Stop Loss" (05:39) and "Trailing SL" (Trailing Stop Loss) (05:45). He sets a "Trailing Delta" of 20% (05:49), explaining this will automatically sell the token if its price drops 20% from its highest point after purchase, thus locking in profits or minimizing losses.

Chapter 3: Insights from a $600k Pro Trader ("Cowboy")

The speaker shares key takeaways from a direct message conversation he had with "Cowboy," the successful trader mentioned in the intro.

  • Insight: When asked how to find good meme coins, the trader replied, "Rely on experience" (06:30).
  • Insight: When asked if understanding Chinese culture is mandatory, the trader said, "Required. This is all part of our culture, so we are familiar with it" (06:48).
  • Insight: This level of trading is extremely demanding, requiring "more than 13 hours" of work per day (07:01).
  • Insight: The trader's single piece of advice for a new trader was to "Join WeChat group[s]" (07:09), highlighting the insular and language-gated nature of this market.

Chapter 4: The "Lazy Way": Using an Algorithmic Scanner

Given the high barriers to entry revealed in the interview (language, culture, time), the speaker presents an alternative "lazy way" using an algorithmic tool.

  • Insight: The "lazy way" involves using a tool called "StalkFun" and its "BNB PrintScan" feature (08:36). This tool algorithmically scans for new tokens based on KOL activity, top trader buys, and other criteria, effectively automating the 13-hour research process.

  • Insight: A critical feature of StalkFun is that it automatically translates Chinese-based memes (09:18), solving the language barrier.

  • Practical Example: The "Lazy Way" Workflow (08:41 - 09:41)

    • This example demonstrates the workflow of using the scanner to find and verify a trade.
    • Action 1 (Discovery): The speaker opens the "StalkFun" dashboard and spots a new token called "Foresight" that the algorithm has flagged (08:41, 09:24).
    • Action 2 (Cross-Reference): He switches back to his "Padre" tool and looks at the "Wallet Manager" (09:25).
    • Result (The Signal): He sees that the "CryptoC..." wallet (the profitable trader he just added) bought "Foresight" 8 minutes ago. This provides a powerful, independent confirmation: both the algorithm and a top manual trader identified the same token.
    • Action 3 (Final Due Diligence): He then clicks the "Foresight" token within Padre to analyze its chart (09:28) and opens its X (Twitter) profile (09:31) to do a final check before deciding to buy.

2 Strategies Used By user in the memecoins trenches by Sebastian

Chapter 1: The Foundation: Session & Mindset (00:28 - 01:40)

The speaker emphasizes that before applying any strategy, traders must adopt a professional mindset and trade during a specific time window.

  • The Problem: Most new traders fail because they "ape" into new tokens 24/7 with no strategy, trying to trade in an overwhelmingly fast-paced environment (00:29). 99% of these new tokens go to zero (00:58).
  • The Solution (Crucial Insight): Only trade the "Europe (EU) Session" (01:13).
  • Time: 2:00 AM to 10:00 AM Eastern Standard Time (EST) (01:21).
  • Benefits of EU Session:
    • It's a slower-paced market, making it easier for beginners (01:26).
    • There is less "PVP" (Player vs. Player) and fewer "KOLs" (Key Opinion Leaders) or "rudens" (bots) competing with you (01:29).
    • The overall skill gap is lower (01:34).

Chapter 2: Strategy 1: The Attention Filter Strategy (01:41 - 03:56)

This strategy is designed to find brand-new coins in the "New Pairs" section before they gain massive traction.

  • Platform Section: Axiom platform, "New Pairs" tab (01:46).
  • Filters: During the EU session, you use no filters (01:47, 02:00). The goal is to see every single token that launches, which is manageable due to the session's lower volume.
  • Core Concept: You are looking for "unique, attention-grabbing narratives" (02:07). The speaker describes memecoin trading as a "game of clickbait" (02:10).
  • The Process:
    1. Scan: Watch the "New Pairs" feed for a token with a "wow factor" or a unique, interesting, or funny narrative (02:15).
    2. Wait: Do not click or buy immediately. This wastes time and is inefficient (02:18).
    3. Confirm: Wait a few seconds to see if the token gets any initial volume or an increase in market cap (e.g., to a few thousand dollars) (02:21). This filters out dead-on-arrival tokens.
    4. Analyze & Enter: Once you see this initial traction, click the token to analyze it. You can either "quick buy" immediately or wait for a small initial dip (like a dev sell) to get a better entry (02:40).
  • What to Avoid: "Recycled, reused, old, boring narratives" (e.g., another standard dog coin). These are often "bundle rugs" or traps with fake bot volume (03:00 - 03:20).

Practical Example 1: "GARY" Trade (03:57 - 05:22)

This is a step-by-step example of the "Attention Filter" strategy in action.

  1. Identification (03:57): While scanning "New Pairs," the speaker spots a token named "GARY."
  2. Analysis (03:59): He reads the description and sees the keywords "Elon," "company," and "animal." This is the "attention-grabbing narrative" he looks for.
  3. Due Diligence (04:03): He investigates and finds the narrative: "GARY" is the name of Elon Musk's pet snail, which is featured as an easter egg on The Boring Company's website.
  4. Verification (04:15): He opens The Boring Company's website, scrolls to the bottom, and confirms the "GARY" snail easter egg is real (04:20). This validates the narrative.
  5. Execution (04:24): Confident in the fresh narrative, he buys 3 SOL worth of "GARY" at a market cap of around $9-10k.
  6. Result (04:35 - 04:58): The token's market cap rises to over $220k. He shows multiple sell orders, including +1.7 SOL (04:35), +2.5 SOL (04:48), and +2.3 SOL (04:51), for a total profit of +21 SOL.

Chapter 3: Strategy 2: The Break of the Low Entry Strategy (05:23 - 09:29)

This strategy is for more established coins found in the "Final Stretch" section that are building momentum.

  • Platform Section: Axiom platform, "Final Stretch" tab (05:26).
  • Filters (Required): This strategy uses very specific filters to find quality tokens (05:40).
    • Bonding Curve: 5% (05:43).
    • Age (Token Limit): 8 to 15 minutes (05:44).
    • Market Cap (Min): $10,000 (05:58).
    • Global Fees Paid (Min): 0.3 to 0.5 (05:54). This is the most important filter as it filters out ~99% of fake bot volume, leaving only tokens with real human traders (06:05).
  • The 3 Criteria for Selection (06:31): After filtering, you must find a coin that meets these three criteria:
    1. #1 Good Wallets in the Coin (06:32): Check if proficient, known-good wallets (which he provides in his Discord) are buying the token.
    2. #2 New Fresh Narratives (06:54): The coin must have a unique story, just like in Strategy 1.
    3. #3 A Strong Community (07:07): Look for an active community on X (Twitter), a "proven and battle-tested dev," or a "community takeover (CTO)" (07:11).
  • The Entry (Technical Pattern):
    1. Once you select a coin, open the chart and identify a "key low" (a recent support level) (07:46).
    2. Wait for the price to retrace and break this key low (07:55).
    3. This break creates the psychological illusion of a "double bottom" (08:12) and often triggers a strong bounce.
    4. You can either buy the exact break of the low or, for a safer entry, wait for confirmation of a bounce with new volume coming in (08:45).

Practical Example 2: "$EMEM" Trade (09:30 - 10:38)

This is a step-by-step example of the "Break of the Low" strategy.

  1. Identification (09:30): The speaker finds "$EMEM" in the "Final Stretch" section (after applying his filters).
  2. Analysis (09:31): He checks the narrative: "This is the anti memecoin... this is a serious investment." He finds this unique and compelling.
  3. Execution (09:38): He opens the chart and identifies a "key low." He waits for the price to dip and break that low. At (09:47), the low is broken, and he executes his buy of 9 SOL.
  4. Result (10:06 - 10:25): The price bounces hard off his entry. He shows multiple sell orders, including +2.5 SOL (10:06), +2 SOL (10:17), and +7 SOL (10:25), securing his profit.

Chapter 4: Conclusion: The Mindset of a Profitable Trader (10:39 - 12:29)

The speaker concludes that having the strategies is not enough; success comes from discipline and mindset.

  • The Beginner's Mistake: Constantly "bouncing around different strategies," trading all day, getting emotional, FOMO-ing, and "top blasting" (buying the peak of a pump) (10:45 - 11:05).
  • The Path to Profitability (The 4 Rules):
    1. Stick to Your Session (11:15): Only trade the EU session, where your strategies are most effective. Accept that you will miss plays, and don't let it affect you.
    2. Stick to Your Strategies (11:27): Only take trades that perfectly fit the criteria of one of the two strategies. Don't gamble.
    3. Journal Every Day (11:40): Write down what you did right, what you did wrong, how you felt, and what you need to improve for the next day.
    4. Treat Trading as a Business (11:50): It is a job, not a jackpot.
  • Final Insight (12:00): Profitability is not about knowing 100 strategies. It's about finding one or two that work, mastering them, and showing up every single day with discipline.

Scaliping in Memecoins Explained by Savant

Chapter 1: Introduction to Memecoin Scalping (00:00 - 00:43)

  • Core Concept (00:03): The video teaches a memecoin trading strategy focused on scalping.
  • Scale (00:07): The strategy is designed for small amounts, such as taking $30-$60 or $50-$100 and aiming for 2x or 3x gains.
  • Methodology (00:19): This strategy does not use technical analysis or indicators. It relies entirely on "volume, vibes, and getting in and out."

Chapter 2: Why Scalp Memecoins? (00:44 - 01:17)

  • High Volatility (00:47): Memecoins "move fast and they move hard." A coin can go from a 7k to a 500k market cap in just a few minutes (00:50).
  • Low Barrier to Entry (00:59): Unlike traditional crypto, you don't need large amounts of capital. You need a "small bag, a decent entry, a bit of nerves, and patience."
  • The Risk (01:05): 95% of people chasing these pumps are "exit liquidity."
  • The Skill (01:09): The most important trick is "knowing when not to enter." Scalping is about speed, attention to volume, and having a system.

Chapter 3: Required Tools (01:18 - 01:41)

  • Trading Platform (01:24): A specialized trading platform for memecoins. The speaker uses Banana Pro.
  • Information Source (01:30): A "CT tracker" (Crypto Twitter) to monitor news and posts from Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs).
  • Mindset (01:38): You must "move fast and read behavior, not charts."

Chapter 4: Step 1: How to Pick Coins (Finding Opportunities) (01:42 - 02:39)

  • Where to Look (01:45): The "most important place" is "The Trenches" on the Banana Pro platform, which shows newly deployed coins.
  • Critical Filters (01:52): Use filters to remove scams. The speaker's settings for "New Deploys" are:
    • Minimum 5% bonding curve (01:54)
    • Minimum volume $2k (01:56)
    • Maximum age 1 minute (01:58)
  • Green Flags (What to Look For):
    • Sudden volume spikes (02:01).
    • Increasing holder count (02:04).
    • Communities with known, high-audience people in them (02:06).
    • Active community members posting the coin's ticker (02:12).
    • The community's follower count on X (Twitter) is "increasing after each refresh" (02:18).
  • Red Flags (What to Avoid):
    • "Bundles" (a type of scam) (02:23).
    • Huge clusters in the "bubble maps" (indicating a few wallets hold too much supply) (02:25).
    • Any single wallet holding more than 6% of the supply (02:28).
  • Key Principle (02:35): "You don't want to buy the first pump." Always check for scams and understand what the coin is about before entering.

Chapter 5: Step 2: Timing Your Entry (02:40 - 03:30)

  • When to Enter (02:45): Do not chase the initial launch. Wait for the first pump to "cool off."
  • The Ideal Entry (02:51): Look for a "pullback or sideways chop" after the initial excitement dies down.
  • Confirmation Signal (02:55): Open the "Transactions" tab and wait for a "new wave of buys hitting in." You want to see "preferably big buys," as very small buys (e.g., 0.05 SOL) are not a strong signal (03:00).
  • Position Sizing (03:05): Enter with a small size (0.1, 0.2, or 0.5 SOL). The speaker emphasizes that "size doesn't matter" for learning the strategy.
  • The Goal (03:14): "What matters the most is getting in before everyone else realizes it's pushing again."
  • Realistic Expectations (03:20): You will not catch the absolute bottom. The goal is to "catch the middle," ride the hype, and exit cleanly.

Chapter 6: Step 3: Exit Strategy (03:31 - 04:26)

  • Rule 1: Have a Number in Mind (03:33):
    • If you scalp, you must have a pre-determined profit target.
    • Example: If you're in with $50 and it 2x to $100, sell "no questions asked" (03:39).
    • "Never get greedy" (03:48).
  • Rule 2: Trust Your Gut (03:57):
    • Sell immediately if you see "volume dying," "big sells in the transactions tab," or the "coin going sideways" (03:59).
  • The Main Goal (04:09): The goal is not to make the most money. It is to "make something, taking it from the table, and moving on to the next coin."
  • Acceptance (04:16): You will always leave money on the table. Consistency and having wins larger than losses is what matters.

Chapter 7: How to Spot Red Flags (Avoiding Traps) (04:27 - 05:13)

  • Red Flag 1: Big Sells (04:33): Be cautious if the chart shows a climb, followed by a few big sell orders dumping the price, followed by another climb and another dump. This indicates large wallets are "dumping huge supply and using you as an exit liquidity" (04:49).
  • Red Flag 2: Faked Bot Volume (04:53): You may see a "bunch of buys flying in," but the "holder count stays the same." This is "volume faked by bots." You can recognize them by their "very small, similar amounts" (05:03).
  • Red Flag 3: No Socials / No Hype (05:07): If the developer isn't "shilling on X" (Twitter) or the community is dead, there is no momentum. "Don't bother" (05:13).

Chapter 8: Practical Example: The $POV Trade (05:14 - 06:29)

  • Coin: $POV (05:16).
  • Initial Analysis (Green Flags):
    • Ticker (05:18): The "very simple ticker" was attractive and made him click.
    • Momentum (05:22): The coin was already gaining momentum and was on the "top of the list in the close to migration section."
    • Bubble Map (05:30): He checked for large holder clusters and "there was none."
    • Socials (05:33): He opened the linked X (Twitter) profile and found "a guy doing a POV live on PumpFun." This was a strong, active social signal.
  • The Mistake (05:39): The speaker admits he "made a mistake with taking too much time" checking the socials and watching the live stream. By the time he was done, the coin was already at a 40k market cap (05:46).
  • Trade Decision (05:50):
    • Despite the "slow cook," the chart looked bullish.
    • Crucially, there were "no sell-offs," suggesting holders were confident.
    • Because of these positive signs, he "didn't wait for any pullbacks and just blasted in" (05:58).
  • The Trade:
    • Entry (06:02): Entered at a 44k market cap (which he notes was "pretty late").
    • Position Size (06:12): 0.15 SOL.
    • Exit (06:14): Sold the position at "almost 80k market cap."
  • Result (06:18): A 70% profit "done in under 10 minutes."
  • Takeaway (06:27): The trade was a success based on "no TA, just volume and timing."

Chapter 9: Key Rules for Survival (06:30 - 07:27)

  • Rule 1: Start Small (06:36): Even $20 scalps can 3x. "Build confidence before size" (06:39). If you can make a profit with $20, you can make a profit with $100 or $1000.
  • Rule 2: Don't Risk Rent Money (06:58): You must be "as emotionless as possible" when trading. Expect to lose your stake, as these coins have "zero utility" (06:56).
  • Rule 3: Log Your Trades (07:06): Keep a journal of all your trades to "learn what kind of entries and exits work best for you" (07:08) and "analyze yourself" (07:16).
  • Rule 4: Don't Revenge Trade (07:18): If you get rugged or enter late, "walk away." There is "always another coin" (07:22).

Chapter 10: Advanced Tip: Wallet Tracking (07:28 - 08:29)

  • Concept (07:29): A powerful strategy is to "learn to track wallets."
  • How to Find Wallets (07:31): Find a coin that performed well, open the "Top Traders" list (on Banana Pro), and check their PNL (Profit and Loss).
  • How to Analyze (07:41): If you find a wallet with a good record, copy its address and paste it into Solscan. There you can see what they are buying, holding, and selling.
  • Automation (07:50): You can also "copy trade" these wallets. Banana Pro has a built-in copy trading bot that can automatically copy the trades of a wallet you've found (08:00).
  • Final Summary (08:07): "In the memecoin market, you don't need to read charts. You need to read volume, momentum, and emotions... Get in early, get out fast. Respect the risk. Don't fall in love with any coin." (08:15).

Trading With Axiom Filters How a user made 600k in 6months by Ethan Prosper

Chapter 5: Filtering Tokens & Avoiding Scams (5:27 - 7:02)

  • (5:31) Insight: Many newly listed coins are scams ("rug pulls") designed to steal money, even if they show high market caps initially on platforms.

  • (5:46) Insight: Using filters helps remove a significant percentage of these scam coins.

  • (5:48) Insight: The speaker provides pre-made filter configurations in his Discord server.

  • (6:09) Insight: Filters can be applied based on the "protocol" (platform) the coin launched on (e.g., Pump.fun, Raydium). Focusing on reputable protocols helps.

  • (6:33) Insight: The Pulse page is typically divided into sections: "New Pairs" (brand new coins), "Final Stretch" (coins nearing Raydium migration on Pump.fun), and "Migrated" (coins that have launched on Raydium). Filters can be applied independently to each section.

  • Practical Example 6: Importing Discord Filters into Axiom (5:48 - 6:45)

    1. Join the speaker's Discord server (link provided).
    2. Verify your account if necessary.
    3. Navigate to the "#filters" channel under the "FREE" category.
    4. You'll find blocks of code (JSON format) labeled "NEW PAIRS:", "FINAL STRETCH:", and "MIGRATED:".
    5. For New Pairs: Click the copy icon next to the "NEW PAIRS" code block. Go to Axiom's Pulse page. Click the "Filter" button. Ensure the "New Pairs" tab is selected. Click "Import". Paste the code. Click "Import". (Optionally, deselect less common protocols like Bags, Heaven, Sugar, etc., keeping Pump, Bonk, Moonshot, Jupiter, LaunchLab, Raydium, Believe).
    6. For Final Stretch: Go back to Discord, copy the "FINAL STRETCH" code. Go to Axiom, click the "Filter" button, select the "Final Stretch" tab, click "Import", paste the code, click "Import".
    7. For Migrated: Go back to Discord, copy the "MIGRATED" code. Go to Axiom, click the "Filter" button, select the "Migrated" tab, click "Import", paste the code, click "Import".
    8. Click "Apply All" or close the filter window. The Pulse page should now display fewer, potentially safer coins.

Chapter 6: Analyzing Individual Coins & Wallet Tracking (7:02 - 9:47)

  • (7:03) Insight: After filtering, analyze promising coins based on Market Cap (MC), Volume (V), number of Holders, and Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs) involved.

  • (7:13) Insight: KOLs are influencers or known traders involved in a coin, which can indicate potential. Axiom shows KOL involvement with a specific icon.

  • (7:16) Insight: Clicking on a coin displays its price chart and detailed trading information. Analyze the chart for trends (uptrends, dips).

  • (7:32) Insight: Wallet Tracking is Crucial: The most important activity, especially for beginners, is tracking the wallets of successful traders to understand why price moves happen (who is buying/selling).

  • (7:51) Insight: Axiom has a dedicated "Trackers" section for managing tracked wallets.

  • (7:54) Insight: The speaker provides a list of wallets to track in his Discord.

  • (8:16) Insight: Wallet tracking allows viewing the Profit and Loss (PNL), performance history, and current holdings/trades of specific wallets. This helps identify profitable traders to potentially copy or learn from.

  • (8:33) Insight: Many traders use multiple wallets ("multi-walleting") to manage trades or obscure their total position size. Axiom allows viewing trades across your own multiple connected/imported wallets.

  • (9:03) Insight: Axiom overlays buy/sell activity from tracked wallets directly onto the price chart using customizable emojis/icons ("Bubbles"). This visually shows when influential traders enter or exit positions.

  • (9:33) Insight: The "Top Traders" tab for a specific coin shows the most profitable wallets that traded that coin, including their average buy/sell prices and realized PNL.

  • Practical Example 7: Analyzing a Coin ("Robbery") (7:04 - 7:23)

    1. On the Pulse page (Final Stretch), the speaker identifies "Robbery" with ~$50k MC, ~$134k Volume, 315 Holders, 4 KOLs.
    2. Clicks the KOL icon, showing associated influencers.
    3. Clicks on the coin name ("Robbery") to open its detailed view with the chart.
    4. Observes the chart's uptrend and dips, deeming it looks like a "real coin".
  • Practical Example 8: Setting Up Wallet Tracking in Axiom (7:51 - 8:14)

    1. Go to the "Trackers" tab in Axiom.
    2. Go to the speaker's Discord, "#wallet-tracking" channel.
    3. Find the message containing the wallet list (often a downloadable .txt file). Download/copy the content (JSON format).
    4. Go back to Axiom Trackers. Click "Import".
    5. Paste the copied wallet list code into the "Import Wallets" window.
    6. Click "Import".
    7. The list of wallets now appears in the Wallet Manager.
  • Practical Example 9: Analyzing a Tracked Wallet (Ethan Pr0spr) (8:21 - 8:32)

    1. In Axiom Trackers, search for "Ethan".
    2. Click on the wallet entry for "Ethan Pr0spr".
    3. Click the activity/scan icon.
    4. A detailed view opens showing Total Value, PNL (Unrealized/Realized), Performance graph over time (7d, 30d, Max), Active Positions, History, and Top 100 trades.
    5. Speaker notes his own wallet made $40k over 30 days in this example.
  • Practical Example 10: Using Bubbles & Top Traders ("Robbery" Coin) (9:01 - 9:44)

    1. Go back to the detailed chart view for the "Robbery" coin.
    2. The chart now shows icons (bubbles) indicating buys (e.g., green flames) and sells (e.g., red stop signs) from tracked wallets.
    3. Hovering over a bubble shows which tracked wallet made the trade, the amount, and the market cap at the time (e.g., "aloh bought $420.5 at $11k USD Market Cap").
    4. Speaker notes "aloh" bought early, bringing attention. Then "cented" (another tracked trader) bought.
    5. Clicks on "cented"'s bubble or finds him in trackers to see his overall PNL ($350k in 30 days).
    6. Navigates to the "Top Traders" tab below the chart for the "Robbery" coin.
    7. Identifies "cented" as the top trader for this specific coin.
    8. Observes "cented"'s stats for this coin: Bought avg $1.2k at $15.4k MC, Sold avg $3.0k at $36.7k MC, Realized PNL +$1.77k.

Chapter 7: How to Buy & Sell on Axiom (9:47 - 13:05)

  • (9:49) Insight: Axiom provides multiple ways to buy and sell: Quick Buy buttons on Pulse, Instant Trade Panel, and a standard Buy/Sell interface.

  • (10:26) Insight: A general rule of thumb is to be cautious if one holder owns more than 5% of the total coin supply, although successful traders might split holdings across multiple wallets.

  • (11:19) Insight: The "Instant Trade" panel provides quick buy/sell buttons (preset amounts, percentages).

  • (11:34) Insight: The standard Buy/Sell interface (often on the right side) allows market orders, limit orders, and advanced options.

  • (11:43) Insight: Limit orders allow setting a specific price (or market cap) at which you want to buy or sell automatically.

  • (12:08) Insight: "Advanced Mode" (or Advanced Trading Strategy) allows setting up more complex order types, like triggering orders based on specific events (e.g., selling if the developer sells).

  • (12:12) Insight: The "Dev" is the creator of the coin, usually the first wallet to hold the tokens. Tracking dev sells is important. On memecoins, dev selling can sometimes be acceptable ("Dev wants Lambo too"), but on serious projects, it's usually a bad sign.

  • (12:20) Insight: The "Trades Panel" shows a live feed of every single buy and sell transaction occurring for the selected coin.

  • Practical Example 11: Using the Axiom Interface for Trading ("Robbery") (9:50 - 10:25, 11:19 - 12:38)

    1. Layout Setup: Drags the "Wallet Tracker" (showing live tracked trades) and "Trades Panel" (showing all live trades) to the right side of the chart for a consolidated view. Adjusts panel sizes. Clicks on the "Holders" tab below the chart to see the distribution.
    2. Instant Trade: Clicks the "Instant Trade" button below the chart. A panel appears with Buy/Sell options. Shows preset SOL amounts (0.01, 0.1, 1, 10) and percentage sell buttons (10%, 25%, 50%, 100%). Clicking a buy amount (e.g., 0.1 SOL) would execute a market buy. Clicking a sell percentage would sell that portion of the holdings.
    3. Standard Buy/Sell: Uses the panel on the top right. Shows Buy/Sell tabs, Market/Limit/Adv(anced) order types.
    4. Limit Buy: Clicks "Limit". An interface appears to set a target market cap for buying. Drags a slider or enters a value (e.g., sets buy order if MC drops to $29.7k). Enters the amount (e.g., 1 SOL). Places the order.
    5. Limit Sell: Clicks "Sell", then "Limit". Sets a target market cap for selling (e.g., $50.9k MC). Enters amount/percentage. Places order.
    6. Trades Panel Usage: Clicks the "Trades Panel" button. It shows a list of recent trades (Buy/Sell, Amount USD, Total USD, Trader Wallet snippet, Timestamp). Clicks the arrow/icon next to a trade to potentially identify the dev wallet (often the first transaction). Sees the dev bought $200 initially and sold $910 later at $29.5k MC.

Chapter 8: Twitter Tracking Tools (13:05 - 14:57)

  • (13:08) Insight: Setting up a Twitter tracker is essential because tweets from influential accounts can significantly impact memecoin prices, often faster than the news appears on Twitter itself.

  • (13:31) Insight: Axiom has a built-in Twitter tracker feature.

  • (13:41) Insight: The speaker provides a list of Twitter handles to track in his Discord.

  • (14:08) Insight: An alternative/complementary tool is "Rapid Launch", a dedicated Twitter tracking application with more customization (like audio alerts, color-coding).

  • Practical Example 12: Setting Up Axiom Twitter Tracker (13:34 - 14:05)

    1. Go to the "Trackers" tab in Axiom.
    2. On the right side, find the "Twitter Alerts" section. Click "Customize Feed".
    3. Click "Import".
    4. Go to the speaker's Discord (presumably in a specific channel, though not explicitly shown which one, likely near the wallet lists). Copy the list of Twitter handles.
    5. Paste the list into the "Import Twitter List" box in Axiom. Click "Import".
    6. The handles are added to your tracked list.
    7. To view the feed, go back to the "Pulse" page (or any main trading page).
    8. Click the "Twitter" tab/button at the bottom left of the screen.
    9. A panel opens showing the live feed of tweets from the tracked accounts. This panel can be resized and moved.
    10. Demonstrates adding a single handle ("@t9ndra") manually via the "Add Handle" button and refreshing the feed to see their tweets appear.
  • Practical Example 13: Using Rapid Launch (Brief Overview) (14:09 - 14:48)

    1. Speaker shows the Rapid Launch interface (separate application/website) running alongside Axiom.
    2. Rapid Launch displays a scrolling feed of tweets from pre-loaded and custom-added accounts.
    3. The setup involves getting the tool (link provided), which comes pre-loaded with accounts, and potentially customizing alerts (beeps, highlights).
    4. Speaker shows his typical workflow: monitoring both Rapid Launch for important tweets and Axiom Pulse for new coins simultaneously, waiting for a catalyst (tweet) or a promising new coin.

Chapter 9: Trading Settings Explained (14:57 - 18:16)

  • (15:02) Insight: Before actively trading, configuring Buy and Sell settings is crucial, specifically Slippage, Priority Fee, and Bribe Fee.

  • (15:18) Insight: Priority Fee and Bribe Fee are extra payments (in SOL) added to your transaction to incentivize network validators to process your order faster and potentially ahead of others, especially important for new coin launches or volatile situations.

  • (15:29) Insight: These fees determine the order in which simultaneous transactions are processed; higher fees generally mean faster execution.

  • (16:10) Insight: Default/recommended starting settings for low amounts: Priority 0.001 SOL, Bribe 0.01 SOL.

  • (16:21) Insight: Slippage is the maximum percentage change in price you're willing to accept between the moment you submit your order and the moment it executes.

  • (16:40) Insight: High slippage (e.g., 80-100%) ensures your transaction is more likely to go through, even if the price moves significantly against you while the order is pending. Low slippage protects you from buying at a much higher price but increases the chance the transaction fails in fast-moving markets.

  • (17:04) Insight: Recommended Buy Settings: Slippage 100%, Priority 0.001, Bribe 0.01.

  • (17:13) Insight: Recommended Sell Settings: Slippage 40% (lower than buy), Priority 0.001, Bribe 0.01.

  • (17:21) Insight: Increase Bribe Fee (e.g., to 0.1, 0.2, 0.3 SOL) if trading larger amounts or needing faster execution, but it's often unnecessary for small trades (<1 SOL).

  • (17:46) Insight: You can preset the default amount of SOL used for quick buy buttons on the Pulse page.

  • Practical Example 14: Configuring Trading Settings (15:13 - 17:57)

    1. Click the settings icon (gear) near the top right or associated with the buy/sell panel.
    2. A "Trading Settings" window appears with "Buy Settings" and "Sell Settings" tabs.
    3. Buy Settings:
      • Set Slippage (speaker recommends 80% or 100%). Enters "80".
      • Set Priority (speaker recommends 0.001). Enters "0.001".
      • Set Bribe (speaker recommends 0.01). Enters "0.01".
      • (Also shows Auto Fee, MEV Mode, RPC settings - speaker uses defaults).
    4. Sell Settings:
      • Click the "Sell Settings" tab.
      • Set Slippage (speaker recommends lower, e.g., 40%). Enters "40".
      • Set Priority (0.001).
      • Set Bribe (0.01). (Speaker discusses potentially raising Bribe to 0.1-0.3 for larger trades).
    5. Preset Buy Amount: On the Pulse page, find the input field (often showing "0 SOL" or a default value) next to the P1/P2/P3 preset buttons. Enter the desired default buy amount in SOL (e.g., "0.2"). Now, clicking the quick buy button on any coin will use 0.2 SOL. Speaker calculates 0.2 SOL is ~$42 at the time.

Chapter 10: Research & Strategy (18:16 - 21:57)

  • (18:17) Insight: Research is presented as the most important part of trading after wallet tracking.

  • (18:22) Insight: Having information before others provides a significant edge.

  • (18:30) Insight: Research involves investigating a coin's premise, checking its associated Twitter account, website, and community engagement. Look for legitimacy, effort, and potential red flags.

  • (19:16) Insight: The goal is often to find coins very early (e.g., at $6k-$10k market cap in "New Pairs") that have potential to grow significantly (e.g., to $150k+).

  • (19:35) Insight: The Contract Address (CA) is the unique identifier for a token. Reputable projects often display their CA on their website or official channels. You can use the CA to search for the coin on trading platforms or block explorers.

  • (19:48) Insight: Searching the CA on Twitter can reveal conversations, influencer posts, and general sentiment about the coin.

  • (20:31) Insight: The speaker's strategy focuses on buying new pairs very early, researching them quickly, and potentially selling for profit as they gain traction. Other strategies might involve identifying narratives or finding established coins before a major pump.

  • (20:54) Insight: The "narrative" or story behind a memecoin is important. Unique, engaging, or "bullish" narratives (like the "1 viewer" coin with a doxxed streamer) can attract buyers. Showing face (being "doxxed") can add a layer of trust, reducing perceived rug pull risk, acting as a catalyst.

  • Practical Example 15: Researching "HUMO" (18:29 - 18:49)

    1. Sees "HUMO" on Axiom Pulse.
    2. Clicks the Twitter icon associated with the coin.
    3. Examines the "Vende Humos $HUMO" Twitter profile: Bio, posts (mentioning Bybit/Binance listing goals, showing memes).
    4. Clicks the website link from the Twitter profile (vendehumos.org).
    5. Analyzes the website: Sees memes (Pepe), mentions "Zero fundamentals", lists fake advisors (Steve Jobs, George Floyd). Speaker deems it "weird".
  • Practical Example 16: Researching "FEW" (Brief) (18:51 - 19:05)

    1. Sees "log" (tracked wallet) bought "FEW".
    2. Clicks the coin, looks at the chart.
    3. Checks the Twitter: Sees the slogan "Millions will try but only few will win".
    4. Speaker recognizes this coin has attempted to launch/pump multiple times before, concluding it likely won't do well this time due to past failures.
  • Practical Example 17: Researching "LAMA" (Lamanan) (19:07 - 20:29)

    1. Identifies "LAMA" as an older coin that performed well ($150k MC, started at $6k).
    2. Imagines finding it earlier in "New Pairs" at $10k MC.
    3. Clicks the Twitter icon: Sees "Lamanan Crypto EX". Notes it looks like a crypto exchange.
    4. Clicks the website link (lamanan.com). Observes a professional-looking crypto exchange website.
    5. Finds the Contract Address (CA) displayed on the website. Copies it.
    6. Goes back to Axiom Pulse, uses the search bar, pastes the CA. Finds the "LAMA" token, confirming the CA matches.
    7. Goes back to the website, explores the exchange features (trading interface shown). Notes it's a "perp exchange" (perpetual futures).
    8. Checks the Lamanan Twitter again: notes followers, community size (300 members), engagement. Sees it's followed by some known people. Concludes the research process.
  • Practical Example 18: Researching "$BEAN" via CA (19:51 - 20:08)

    1. Identifies "$BEAN off a bean" coin on Axiom Pulse ($200k MC).
    2. Clicks the icon to copy the Contract Address (CA).
    3. Opens Twitter in a browser.
    4. Pastes the CA into the Twitter search bar.
    5. Examines the search results: Looks for mentions of the CA, who is posting about it (influencers?), sentiment, relevant posts.
    6. Sees a post about "$BEAN" from "@based_d0m" who has 20k followers, considering this "bullish".
  • Practical Example 19: Researching "1viewer" (20:39 - 21:37)

    1. Identifies "1viewer" coin. Clicks on it.
    2. Reads the description/narrative: "1 viewer can change your life", sending fees/donations to small Twitch streamers.
    3. Clicks the link to the associated Pump.fun page or live stream.
    4. Observes the live stream: The creator ("seventy six") is showing his face ("doxxed").
    5. Analyzes this as "pretty bullish" because showing face builds trust and strengthens the narrative.
    6. Looks at the chart: Sees buying activity ("people are buying"), notes the coin "just got a lot better" due to the positive research findings (doxxed dev, interesting narrative).
    7. Considers the potential: If found early (e.g., $10k MC), the doxxed streamer and narrative make it potentially worth more (e.g., $40k+).

Chapter 11: Conclusion (21:57 - 22:29)

  • (21:58) Acknowledges the video covered a lot ("basics").