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KOL Trade Blocks

KOL Trade Blocks delivers structured, real-time trade signals from WhaleClaw’s top-pick KOLs. Instead of scrolling through raw Telegram chatter, you get clean entries with direction, levels, and a chart.

Channel: #kol-trade-blocks (paid)

Example KOL Trade Block

running: whale_htf: long running entry 71750

limits: whale_trend1: long entry 70888 whale_htf: short entry 81200 whale_smc: short entry 79200 whale_his: short entry 76000 – 79000 whale_smc2: short entry 77000

[Attached: 8H BTC chart with annotated entry zones]

These are active trades — a KOL has entered and is holding. The entry price tells you where they got in. If the current price is above a long entry, the trade is in profit.

These are pending entries — KOLs have set limit orders at specific prices. They’re waiting for price to come to them. This tells you:

  • Where smart money wants to buy (long limit entries below current price)
  • Where smart money wants to sell (short limit entries above current price)

Each KOL has a coded identifier (whale_htf, whale_smc, whale_trend1, etc.) that represents a specific top-pick trader. These are the traders who have been validated through the KOL selection process and consistently produce edge.

Every trade block includes an annotated chart showing:

  • Current price action
  • Entry zones for each KOL (color-coded)
  • Key structural levels
  • Order block and liquidity zones

The chart is the visual complement to the text data — it shows you the “why” behind the levels.

Confluence hunting: When multiple KOLs have entries clustered around the same price zone, that’s a high-confluence level. If whale_htf, whale_smc, and whale_trend1 all have long entries between 70.8k–71.8k, that zone has serious buying interest.

Fade detection: If most KOLs have short limits clustered above (say 79k–81k), and the composite is bullish short-term, you know there’s overhead resistance where smart money plans to sell.

Position tracking: Monitor running trades to see if top KOLs are still holding or if their positions are being closed. Changes in running status often precede market moves.

Each KOL signal is tracked through a lifecycle:

  1. Running — KOL has entered, trade is active
  2. TP1 hit — First target reached, stop typically moves to breakeven
  3. TP2/TP3 hit — Subsequent targets
  4. Closed — Trade completed
  5. Invalidated — Stop hit or signal cancelled

The channel updates in real-time as signals progress through their lifecycle.

See the founder’s strategy

Lon’s personal multi-timeframe decision panel — the same framework he trades with.

MTF Strategy →