"Hey, should I trade my $FTM for $AVAX? or ... on-chain: trade my $AVAX for $QI? ... or vice versa?"
How do you know when to trade, and when it's a good one?
Why not ask `rekt` if you're going to get, well: rekt in a trade?
As you see above, `rekt` makes a trade-call along the EMA-20 indicator and assigns a confidence based upon the EMA20-vs-ratio δ.
What are the EMAs? `ema` charts those for you, showing the results in, e.g., a @tradingview chart.
"Which blockchains and which tokens does `rekt` follow, o, el geophf?" you ask.
Good question. `$PIVOT` has all the assets I currently track.
They are:
- $BTC $ETH $BNB $DOT $LINK $PAXG stables (across the blockaverse)
- Arbitrum: $ARB
- Avalanche: $AVAX $QI
- Cardano: $ADA $INDY $SNEK
- CØSMOS: $ATOM $OSMO
- Kujira: $KUJI $MNTA
- Optimism: $OP $LDO $SNX
- Terra: $LUNA $ROAR $ASTRO
Here's the thing.
All the above is open-source.
If you focus your investments on different blockchains, you can fork the repository and track your own tokens.
I walk you through this, step-by-step, in a series of quizzes – a big ol' geophf HOWTO!
This whole concept of trading is what I call 'pivot arbitrage.' I have found pivot-arbitrage to be efficacious.
I maintain the repository of `pivot` and explore pivot-arbitrage in video and in articles (search for 'pivot').
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