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KRISHA
Knowledge-Rich Investment Screening, Heuristics, and Analysis
Orientation
Guide
Using crypto research without getting pulled into hype
A stricter way to treat crypto shortlists as watchlist inputs instead of instant conviction.
Crypto research needs tighter discipline because narratives move faster, liquidity changes abruptly, and overnight volatility can distort confidence. A crypto shortlist is most useful when it acts as a structured watchlist rather than a shortcut into immediate conviction.
Key points
What to keep in mind
- Use the crypto module to compare liquid majors, not to chase every fast-moving narrative.
- Treat every shortlist as fragile if Bitcoin context, liquidity, or trend are weak.
- If you would not be comfortable holding through overnight volatility, do deeper work before acting.
Practical checklist
How to apply this guide
- Start with majors and liquid names before exploring anything thinner.
- Check whether regime, liquidity, and broader crypto sentiment support the shortlist.
- Decide in advance what level of volatility you are actually willing to tolerate.
Common mistakes
What usually goes wrong
- Chasing narrative tokens because they are trending instead of comparing liquid majors first.
- Ignoring market-structure risk and assuming a clean shortlist means durable strength.
- Underestimating how quickly crypto conditions can flip from supportive to hostile.
Why this matters
Use AI market research as a filter, not a shortcut
These guides are meant to help users compare names more deliberately, reduce noise, and use AI stock research as a first-pass screening tool rather than a substitute for judgment.
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