You’ve been staring at the 1-hour chart for Sui futures. You’ve watched the candles form. You’ve seen the patterns develop. And then—nothing. The trade either misses completely or gets stopped out right before the move you expected.
Here’s what’s actually happening. You’re using the wrong framework for this timeframe. Most traders treat 1-hour charts like they treat 4-hour or daily charts. They zoom out mentally and try to find the “big picture” direction. Then they wait for perfect setups that never come on a 1-hour timeframe. The result? Frustration, missed opportunities, and a growing suspicion that Sui futures just don’t work the way people claim.
I’m going to show you exactly how I approach Sui futures on 1-hour charts. This isn’t theory. This is the process I’ve refined over hundreds of trades. Stick around, because the whole thing comes down to understanding what the 1-hour chart actually is—and isn’t.
What the 1-Hour Chart Actually Is
The 1-hour chart sits in an awkward middle ground. It’s too fast for swing trading thinking, yet too slow for scalping tactics. Here’s the deal — you need to stop treating it as a compromise between timeframes. It’s actually its own beast with specific characteristics.
On Sui futures specifically, the 1-hour chart captures enough noise filtration to show real trends, but not so much lag that you miss opportunities. When I’m analyzing Sui futures, I’m looking at roughly 24 candles per day, which gives me enough data points to identify institutional flow without getting whipsawed by random volatility.
The $580 billion in trading volume that flows through Sui futures monthly creates predictable behavior patterns on this timeframe. These patterns repeat because the same types of traders operate here—medium-frequency players, algorithmic systems, and retail traders looking for something between day trading and position trading.
Step One: Building the Foundation View
Before I look at any indicators, I establish what’s called the “foundation view.” This is the structural landscape of the chart itself. Where are the key levels? What has price done recently? Where are the obvious support and resistance zones?
For Sui futures on the 1-hour chart, I start by identifying the previous swing high and swing low. These become my reference points. I mark them visually on the chart. Then I look for consolidation zones—areas where price spent multiple hours churning sideways. These zones act like magnetic fields for price.
What this means is that when I see price approaching one of these zones on a 1-hour chart, I know the probability of a reaction increases substantially. The reason is simple: institutions and large traders accumulate positions during these consolidation periods. When price breaks out (or breaks down), it often does so quickly because the “fuel” has been building.
Let me be honest here. Most traders skip this step entirely. They jump straight to indicators and overlays without understanding the structural context. This is a mistake, and it’s probably the single biggest reason people lose money on 1-hour Sui futures trades.
Step Two: Reading the Trend (The Right Way)
Trend identification on 1-hour Sui futures isn’t about finding the “main trend” and trading with it. It’s about understanding the trend you’re actually going to trade. There are three trends operating simultaneously on any chart: the trend on your timeframe, the trend on the next higher timeframe, and the trend on the next lower timeframe.
For the 1-hour chart, I focus primarily on the 1-hour trend itself, but I keep the 4-hour trend in my peripheral vision. If the 4-hour trend is bearish and the 1-hour is showing a bullish pullback, that’s a different trade than if both timeframes align bullish.
Here’s the practical approach. I use a simple 20-period EMA on the 1-hour chart. When price is above this EMA, I treat the bias as bullish. When price is below, I treat it as bearish. But I don’t trade every signal. I wait for price to come back to the EMA after being away from it. These “retests” are where the best opportunities appear.
The disconnect most people experience is thinking they need to catch the exact top or bottom. You don’t. On a 1-hour chart, you want to catch the middle portion of moves, not the beginnings. The risk-reward of trying to pick exact reversals on 1-hour charts is terrible. The probability of success is lower, and the emotional toll is higher.
Step Three: Timing Entries with Precision
Entry timing separates profitable traders from the rest. On 1-hour Sui futures, I’ve found that volume-weighted approaches work best. When volume spikes on a candle that’s moving in the direction of my thesis, that’s usually a good entry signal.
Let me walk through a specific example. A few months back, I was watching Sui futures consolidate in a tight range. The 1-hour chart showed price trapped between $2.10 and $2.05. I had identified this consolidation zone earlier using my foundation view process. Then, on increased volume, price broke above $2.10 with strength. I entered long three candles later when price retested the broken level as support. The move that followed was clean—straight up to $2.35 over the next several hours.
The key insight here is that I didn’t enter during the breakout. I entered on the retest. Why? Because breakouts fail roughly 40-50% of the time in Sui futures, especially in the short-term timeframes. The retest approach filters out the false breakouts and gives me a higher probability entry.
For stop placement, I use a simple rule: place the stop just beyond the structural level that invalidated my thesis. If I’m buying from a retest of broken resistance, my stop goes just below that resistance level. If price takes out that level, my thesis is wrong—full stop. Noarguing with the market.
Step Four: Position Sizing and Leverage
Here’s where most retail traders go wrong with Sui futures. They treat leverage as a way to multiply gains. In reality, leverage is a risk multiplication tool that cuts both ways. A 10x leverage position doesn’t just amplify your profits—it amplifies everything, including volatility, emotions, and the speed at which you can lose your entire position.
I run most of my 1-hour Sui futures trades at 10x leverage maximum. Some setups warrant 5x if I’m entering against the higher timeframe trend. I never use maximum leverage on a single position, even if I’m confident about the trade. Here’s the thing—confidence is not a risk management strategy.
Position sizing comes down to how much I’m willing to lose on a single trade. I use a hard rule: no more than 1-2% of my trading capital on any single Sui futures position. This means if I have $10,000 in my account, I’m risking $100-200 per trade. From that dollar amount, I calculate my position size based on my stop distance.
The 12% average liquidation rate on Sui futures contracts is a reminder of what happens when traders ignore these rules. Positions get liquidated not because the market was wrong, but because the trader was using too much leverage for the given stop distance. Smaller position sizes with reasonable leverage beat larger positions with extreme leverage nearly every time over a sufficient sample size.
Step Five: Reading Sui-Specific Signals
Sui futures have characteristics that differ from other perpetual contracts. The funding rate on Sui futures tends to oscillate in patterns that correlate with market sentiment cycles. When funding is extremely negative, it often signals fear and potential bottoming. When funding spikes extremely positive, it often precedes tops or at least temporary pauses.
I track the funding rate on my trading platform alongside the 1-hour chart. When I see a strong directional move on the chart AND extreme funding readings, I pay attention. These convergences often mark exhaustion points or acceleration points depending on the direction.
What most people don’t know is that the 1-hour chart’s relationship with Sui’s staking rewards creates predictable oscillations. Every 8-hour epoch cycle, there’s typically a minor shift in selling pressure as validator rewards are distributed. On the 1-hour chart, this manifests as subtle but tradeable intraday patterns around these epoch transitions. Most traders completely miss this because they’re not thinking about Sui’s underlying tokenomics.
Exit Strategy: Knowing When to Take Money Off the Table
Exits are harder than entries for most traders. On 1-hour Sui futures, I use a trailing stop approach once price moves in my favor by a multiple of my risk. For example, if I’m risking $100 on a trade and price moves $150 in my favor, I move my stop to breakeven immediately.
From there, I use a combination of structure-based exits and time-based exits. If price approaches a major level and stalls, I’ll often take partial profits even if my target hasn’t been hit. Missing the absolute top (or bottom) is not a failure. Catching 60-70% of a move consistently beats the emotional rollercoaster of chasing perfect exits.
The analytical approach here is to think in terms of probability cones. Your exit zone should be an area of the chart where multiple factors suggest price might stall—a previous high, a round number, a trendline, an EMA. When these factors converge, take profits. Don’t wait for a specific price point that exists only in your imagination.
The Process Checklist
Let me give you the actual checklist I run through before every Sui futures trade on the 1-hour chart.
First: Identify the structural landscape. Mark your key levels before anything else. No exceptions.
Second: Determine the trend on the 1-hour timeframe and note the 4-hour context. Are you trading with or against the higher timeframe?
Third: Wait for price to approach a structural level in the direction of your thesis. The retest is more important than the initial move.
Fourth: Confirm with volume. Is volume expanding on the directional candles? If volume is declining as price moves toward your target, be cautious.
Fifth: Calculate position size before entry. Never adjust position size after seeing potential profit. Risk comes first.
Sixth: Set your stop at the structural invalidation point. This should be obvious before you enter, not something you figure out later.
Seventh: Manage the trade actively. Trail your stop, take partial profits at key levels, and don’t add to losing positions.
Why This Framework Works
The process journal approach to 1-hour Sui futures trading works because it forces discipline into a timeframe that’s naturally chaotic. The 1-hour chart will show you hundreds of potential setups every month. Without a framework, you’ll chase the exciting ones and miss the profitable ones.
When I started trading Sui futures, I made every mistake imaginable. I over-leveraged. I moved stops. I ignored my own rules when a trade felt “sure.” The turning point came when I started treating the 1-hour chart as a specific process with specific requirements, rather than a blurry middle ground between scalping and swing trading.
Listen, I get why you’d think that jumping between timeframes doesn’t matter that much. The candle is just a candle, right? But the psychology and mechanics of trading a 1-hour chart are fundamentally different from trading a 5-minute or daily chart. The signals have different reliability. The position sizes need different scaling. The emotional experience is completely distinct.
85% of traders who approach 1-hour Sui futures with a daily chart mindset end up frustrated within the first month. The timeframe demands its own respect, its own process, its own expectations. Master that, and you’ve got an edge that most traders will never develop.
Your Next Move
You could spend another six months experimenting with different indicators and strategies on your 1-hour Sui futures chart. You could keep getting stopped out, keep doubting your process, keep wondering what you’re missing.
Or you could try this framework as-is for the next 20 trades. Track your results. Note where you followed the process and where you didn’t. The data will tell you everything you need to know about whether this approach works for your specific situation.
I’m not saying this is the only way to trade Sui futures on 1-hour charts. I’m saying this is a process that works consistently when applied with discipline. The market doesn’t care about your opinions or your feelings. It only responds to supply and demand, structure and momentum. This framework puts you on the right side of that equation more often than not.
Start with one chart. Follow the checklist. Document everything. After a few weeks, you’ll have real data about what’s working and what isn’t. That’s the only process that actually matters in the end.
Frequently Asked Questions
What timeframe is best for Sui futures trading?
The 1-hour chart offers a balance between noise filtration and signal frequency that many traders find optimal for Sui futures. It captures enough institutional activity to show real trends while remaining fast enough for medium-frequency trading strategies. However, the “best” timeframe depends on your available time, risk tolerance, and trading capital size.
How much leverage should I use on Sui futures 1-hour charts?
I recommend using 10x leverage or less for most 1-hour Sui futures trades. Higher leverage dramatically increases liquidation risk, especially on a volatile asset like SUI. The key is matching your leverage to your stop distance—if your stop is tight, you can use more leverage; if your stop is wider, reduce leverage accordingly.
What indicators work best for 1-hour Sui futures?
Simple indicators outperform complex ones on 1-hour charts. A 20-period EMA for trend direction, volume analysis for confirmation, and structural support/resistance levels form the foundation. Avoid overcomplicating with too many overlays—the data becomes contradictory and paralyzes decision-making.
How do I identify the best entry points on 1-hour charts?
Retests of broken levels offer high-probability entries on 1-hour Sui futures. Wait for price to break a structural level, then return to that level as support or resistance before entering. This filters out false breakouts and gives you a better risk-reward ratio than entering during the initial breakout.
What’s the most common mistake on 1-hour Sui futures?
Most traders treat 1-hour charts like higher timeframes, waiting for perfect setups that don’t exist on this timeframe. They also over-leverage because they see “big moves” on the chart. The 1-hour timeframe requires its own framework—you need to catch the middle portions of moves rather than exact reversals, and you need smaller position sizes relative to your capital.
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Last Updated: January 2025
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David Kim 作者
链上数据分析师 | 量化交易研究者
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