Strategy idea
A deep buy setup is not about chasing a fresh pump. It looks for tokens that already had attention, volume and a market, then pulled back hard from the high. Fasol Alerts helps find those candidates quickly, but the entry decision still belongs to the trader.
Why 50k-500k ATH
A very small ATH often means weak liquidity and little market interest. A very large ATH can mean the token is already in broad distribution. The 50k-500k range is a practical starting zone because the token had some attention, but may still be light enough for a technical bounce.
- ATH: 50k-500k
- Drop from ATH: 80-85%
- Bot Fee: from 2 SOL
- Narrative and current meta
- Chart behavior after panic
- Liquidity and ability to exit
Entry logic
A deep buy alert often arrives before the final low. Do not rush because a token is already down. Watch whether selling slows, whether buyers return and whether the chart starts to build structure instead of continuing a clean breakdown.
Build a sample before size
Watch the setup for one or two days before trading it with size. Log every alert, not just the winners. Note the drop level, chart structure, bounce percentage, failures, dead tokens and how often the token reaches 2x or more from a realistic entry.
Trade plan
A deep buy trade needs a predefined exit. Some traders move to breakeven after a strong bounce, some take partial profit around 2x, and some hold for a larger move only when the data supports it. The important part is that the plan exists before entry.
Market timing
Deep pullbacks are not equally useful all day. Liquidity, attention and reaction speed change by session. If the market is dead, skipping a setup can be a better decision than forcing a trade.
Risk note
Deep buy is an advanced, high-risk strategy. A token that is down 90% can still go lower or never recover. Use small size, avoid averaging down without a reason and accept that some days should be skipped.
Deep Buy FAQ
Should I buy immediately after a deep alert?
No. Use the alert to find a candidate, then check chart, volume, holders, liquidity and context.
Why is skipping sometimes better?
If the token has no volume, no buyback after panic or dangerous holder structure, skipping protects capital better than forcing an entry.