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Always trader, often shitposter, sometimes educator. @breakoutprop

1k following747k followers

The Entertainer

Cred is a high-octane trader who moonlights as a premier shitposter and occasional educator, equal parts market take and meme. With near-a-million followers, he turns trade blunders and wins into viral content that traders actually look forward to. Expect sarcasm, hot takes, and the kind of humility only a liquidation can teach.

Impressions
860.2k-21.7k
$161.24
Likes
17.4k198
86%
Retweets
88720
4%
Replies
897-72
4%
Bookmarks
944-219
5%

You teach risk management with the same diligence you manage your stop losses, which is to say, only after the fireworks and definitely after you've tweeted the punchline. Your strategy seems to be 'hold for memes, sell for the content.'

Built a massive, engaged audience (747K followers) by turning trading commentary into must-read entertainment, and scored multiple viral hits, including a Genesis Timeline post that racked up over 10k likes and sparked real conversation about a major market event.

To make markets entertaining and accessible: teach through sarcasm, warn through jokes, and keep a huge community awake and engaged with real-time trading color and candid commentary.

Believes markets are best understood with a mix of blunt honesty and humor; values transparency (even when it hurts), contrarian thinking, and the idea that a good laugh makes tough lessons stick. Trusts edge over hype and skepticism over blind optimism.

Relentless engagement and timing, knows how to package market insight as entertaining content; excellent at turning complex events into memorable one-liners; high virality and community loyalty.

Can be polarizing: shitposting sometimes undermines credibility or alienates conservative followers; impulsive takes and glorified revenge-trade anecdotes risk modeling bad behavior for impressionable traders.

Double down on a content formula: 1) Start threads that open with a meme or one-liner, then deliver a clear, tradeable takeaway; 2) Use short video clips or live Spaces to walk through trades in real time (people love 'watch me trade' energy); 3) Host regular AMAs and collab with other trader/influencer accounts to cross-pollinate followers; 4) Pin a clear content pillar tweet (what you post: memes, lessons, paid signals?) and promote a subscriber-only benefit for deeper lessons; 5) Track analytics to repeat formats that drive follows and convert virality into retention, keep the shitposts, but let a few threads build long-term trust.

Fun fact: Cred grew a 747,925-strong audience by blending trade calls, savage commentary, and unapologetic shitposting. His top tweets routinely hit 7, 10k+ likes (one viral Genesis Timeline post pulled 10,745 likes), and he once bragged about buying ETH at $4,139 and selling at $4,140, a flex that reads like performance art.

Top tweets of Cred

Most engaged tweets of Cred

Funding Rates The funding rate is the cost of holding an open position in a perpetual swap contract (perp). It is usually calculated by the difference between the [price of the perpetual swap contract] and [price of a spot-based index]. If funding is positive, the perp price is trading at a premium (above) the index price. Open long positions pay funding, open short positions receive funding. If funding is negative, the perp price is trading at a discount (below) the index price. Open short positions pay funding, open long positions receive funding. Perps are different to standard futures contracts because there is no expiry or rollover mechanism. This begs the question: how and why do perps generally trade in line with spot markets? Answer: Funding. This is a built-in arbitrage mechanism designed to incentivise traders to keep these instruments (specifically their prices) in line with one another. For example: Perp trading meaningfully above the spot index price --> funding rate goes up. Two things happen: 1. It becomes more expensive for long holders to keep their positions open (negative incentive). 2. Traders can buy spot, sell the perp, and collect the funding rate with minimal directional exposure (positive incentive). The bigger the difference between the perp price and the spot price, the higher the funding rate. Think of this as providing greater incentives to arb the difference the more out of line these instruments get from each other. To be crystal clear, funding is primarily a product of the difference between [perp price] and [spot-based index price]. I'll also reiterate an important point from an earlier tweet: if funding is at baseline and/or there is no interesting divergence forming between price, funding, and time - you are unlikely to find an attractive setup. All of these tools become complementary and contextually interesting when "something doesn't add up" or if they're at/near a relative extreme. From a trading perspective, identifying divergences between funding and price can lead you closer to productive trade ideas: 1. Example: High positive funding but price is moving lower or stalling/not moving higher. 1.1. Reasonable inference: Perp longs are aggressive but are not being rewarded for it. This is potentially bearish (especially if other contextual clues present e.g. price into key resistance). 2. Example: High negative funding but price is moving higher or stalling/not moving lower. 2.1. Reasonable inference: Perp shorts are aggressive but are not being rewarded for it. This is potentially bullish (especially if other contextual clues present e.g. price into key support). 3. Example: Funding becoming more positive as price is moving lower. 3.1. Reasonable inference: Perp dip buyers are in 'disbelief' fading the move AND/OR spot traders are the aggressive sellers. This is potentially bearish (especially if other contextual clues present e.g. perp OI increasing, spot volumes and CVD leading, et cetera). 4. Example: Funding becoming more negative as price is moving higher. 4.1. Reasonable inference: Perp sellers are in 'disbelief' fading the move AND/OR spot traders are the aggressive buyers (especially if other contextual clues present e.g. perp OI increasing, spot volumes and CVD leading, et cetera). These are just a few basic ones and you can build more setups especially if you incorporate OI + CVD where appropriate. In essence, we're circling back to very important first principles here: 1. Who (if anyone) is being aggressive? 2. Is their aggression being rewarded? As a final note, it's also important to understand not only what the funding rates are and their implications, but also how they came to be. I can think of three particular examples where funding rates are misinterpreted most frequently. 1. Negative funding after an outsized move with liquidations. As discussed, funding reflects the difference between the perp price and the index price. Perps have higher leverage than the spot-based assets that typically make up the index. As a result, when there's a large amount of liquidations in the perp, those liquidations and messy unwinds exacerbate the size of the move. Perps typically become more dislocated than spot at extremes, so naturally they end up trading at a discount to the index. Accordingly, the negative funding after a wipeout does not necessarily mean that the market is short from the bottom now. It's just a reflection of perps getting hammered harder than spot because of the leverage that they offer. 2. "Spot premium". Spot premium - where spot price of an asset is trading consistently higher than the perp or future price of an asset - can provide useful signals. For example, during the 2021 bull run it was common to see spot exchanges like Coinbase consistently trading at a premium to perps and futures during the U.S. session. One could reasonably see this as a reflection of risk appetite and more aggressive buyers in the spot market, which is generally a good sign. However, this same argument was made many times on the way down from circa ~50k BTC - and it didn't quite work out. Mechanistically, spot was leading the selling --> perps would follow --> perps get liquidated and move more aggressively than spot --> perps end up below spot --> "spot premium". It's the same spot premium in form but completely different in substance and context. If you will be relying on spot premium as an argument for spot demand, make sure that you have other arguments for there being demand in the market (not just the funding rate or basis). 3. Dodgy outlier altcoin (max) funding = squeeze imminent. Particularly pertinent pattern in the second half of 2023. It goes something like: huge price increase --> hugely negative funding --> speculators pile in the long side for continuation/short squeeze on account of the negative funding rate --> spot gets mega dumped instead and funding normalises. For the outlier lower caps specifically, I'd be sceptical about looking into funding-oriented stuff too closely as it tends to be 'gamed' more often than not. The signals tend to be clearer on more liquid, higher cap assets. More broadly, funding alone does not always make for a compelling argument for a squeeze. You need to first build a prima facie credible case that the aggressors are the ones offside, ideally with some confluence via OI. Even then, positive funding can normalise by perps closing/spot buying and negative funding can normalise by perps buying/spot selling - without any dramatic squeeze. There are a lot of other interesting things about funding rates, but this is already quite long for an 'introductory' post. Hope you enjoyed this one. Thanks for reading and let me know if you want more.

1M

The market is dipping. You bullposted at the high. You're worried your followers are about to clown you, and your sweetheart KOL seed deals will dry up as a result. Here are your options: 1. Double down. Talk about how this is a weekly open scam that'll revert ASAP, and how it's a generational opportunity to get even more long. Also raise your targets in the process. 2. Obscure via TA. You must distract your followers. Get in the weeds with the TA. Use the 5M-1H time frames and just start making shit up. CME gap liquidity purge reverse sudoku orderblock retest. Lots of levels, lines, and annotations. 3. Obscure via order flow. Pay for TRDR, TradingLite, Exocharts, Okotoki, Hyblock, and whatever else you can get your hands on. You must focus on the micro and sow confusion. Post a liquidation heatmap with an emoji. Post a footprint chart with the worst settings imaginable and talk about delta clusters. Post a Velo chart with every indicator you can find and make stuff up about spot book depth, limit taking on perps, Hyperliquid whale, and spot vs perp CVD - ideally all at the same time for maximum obfuscation. 4. Change time frames. Post a monthly time frame and tell people to chill out, even if your last post was about the H1 breakout. Go further: zoom out to the yearly time frame and talk about $BTC price performance after the halving. 5. Risk management LARP. Talk about the large number of liquidations and how important it is to always use a stop loss and have an invalidation. Pivot your embarrassment into an opportunity to teach something that you don't practice. Bonus points if you make stuff up about exiting at break even or for a small loss - it makes you see humble and relatable, even if you just wiped out your entire account. 6. Fake illness. Say you're feeling unwell and won't be around to check the charts. Or that you're taking your pet to the veterinarian. Extra points if you have a cute picture of your pet. Ask for thoughts and prayers. You need to be sympathymaxxxing. Your opps will be more reluctant to clown you if you have a built-in guilt trip defence. Good luck.

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