Sometimes I think, instead of frequent trading, it's better to hold a few promising projects firmly. Take myself as an example: Snowball, Butterfly Fist, and Virus—originally I wanted to profit from price differences, but I bought Snowball at 50k, and I didn't hold on during the first wave of the market, selling early. Looking back now, those who held on stubbornly from the beginning are making more profit.

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SchrodingerGasvip
· 01-10 05:48
This is a classic case of the Efficient Market Hypothesis being slapped in the face by reality... Frequent trading is essentially a game against your own cognitive level, and in the end, you still lose to transaction costs and emotional fluctuations.
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FarmHoppervip
· 01-07 06:55
Damn, you're so right. I have the same problem—being impulsive and constantly chasing highs and selling lows.
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Tokenomics911vip
· 01-07 06:54
If I had known earlier, I wouldn't have acted impulsively. I should have just held onto it when it was at 50k.
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MevShadowrangervip
· 01-07 06:53
Handshake, I went through the same way. Frequent operations are really just giving money to the exchange; it's better to hold onto a conviction.
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HodlOrRegretvip
· 01-07 06:49
If I had known earlier, I wouldn't have acted impulsively. The ones I missed will always be the most rewarding.
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