An 8% annualized return with a lock-up period of over a month still faces quota limitations—that's the true picture of the current market. Liquidity is tightening, investment thresholds are rising, and the space for profit is severely squeezed. Rather than desperately seeking high-yield opportunities, it's better to return to fundamentals and focus on long-term assets that can withstand the test. When the market is difficult to move, it's even more important to maintain a good rhythm.
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degenonymous
· 11h ago
8% locked for a month? I haven't played this trap for a long time, the threshold keeps getting higher while the returns keep getting pumped.
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GasGuzzler
· 12-20 12:50
8% still needs to be locked for so long? I just laughed directly; this return can't even keep up with inflation.
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LiquidatedAgain
· 12-20 12:45
Once again, I've been liquidated. Seeing an 8% annualized return just makes me want to laugh... and locking in for a month? Bro, that's not profit, that's being trapped.
A painful lesson in heavy losses. Stop messing around. Too many people are averaging down to liquidation prices.
Poor risk control points, no matter how much you earn, it's all in vain. I am a living example.
Adding to the position until liquidation, honestly, it's greed causing this. Long-term assets are indeed stable, but who can withstand the downturn?
Market volatility is real, but what's even harder is not going all in... I’ve quit.
An 8% annualized return with a lock-up period of over a month still faces quota limitations—that's the true picture of the current market. Liquidity is tightening, investment thresholds are rising, and the space for profit is severely squeezed. Rather than desperately seeking high-yield opportunities, it's better to return to fundamentals and focus on long-term assets that can withstand the test. When the market is difficult to move, it's even more important to maintain a good rhythm.