To establish a foothold in this market, the first step is to learn how to do subtraction. Most people are obsessed with the thrill of buying, but the truly scarce skill is—knowing when to stay in cash.
Looking at coins like RIVER, during consolidation phases, they often drain your patience and capital. The big trend only appears after the trend becomes clear. Don’t be fooled by hype. When market sentiment is high, coins will be chased; as sentiment cools, the hype dissipates, and funds shift instantly. You can participate, but always be prepared to withdraw.
A volume breakout is not the end; it’s the start of acceleration. Small pullbacks are not reasons to panic; don’t rush to sell just because of minor fluctuations. When projects like BEAT surge fiercely, that’s actually when you should be cautious and defensive—the climax often signals a prelude to a shakeout.
The most efficient way to trade is actually very simple: if the price retraces to support and doesn’t break it, that’s an opportunity; if it hesitates at resistance, it’s time to reduce your position. Short-term trading is about rhythm, not predicting the future. Never go all-in; always start with small positions to test the waters, and increase gradually once the direction is confirmed.
Ultimately, how long you survive determines how much you can earn. The market is always there, but your capital isn’t necessarily. Move slowly and steadily; that’s the way to go further.
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OldLeekNewSickle
· 6h ago
It sounds good, but I've been hearing this logic for three years, and I'm still being washed out...
Being out of the market is fine, but the problem is how do you determine when to be out? It all feels like after-the-fact reasoning.
The examples of RIVER and BEAT are indeed a bit painful. My joke is that I keep grinding in this kind of repeated oscillation.
Trying small positions for trial and error sounds right, but when the market comes, I regret not going all in... This must be the psychological demon.
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FortuneTeller42
· 01-07 07:59
All the all-in players are gone, that really hits home.
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UnluckyMiner
· 01-07 07:56
That's right, last year I was unable to bear leaving my position empty and got caught in RIVER for two months.
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HypotheticalLiquidator
· 01-07 07:52
Sounds good, but the reality is that most people won't make it to that day; their principal has long been wiped out in some all-in gamble.
The temptation of holding no position is really not as quick as buying in.
I'm tired of the RIVER's theory of oscillation consumption; as soon as I turn around, I see people going all-in and being liquidated at the clearing price, with risk control seemingly useless.
Support levels sound stable as long as they aren't broken, but once leverage is used, volatility surges, even support becomes meaningless, and chain liquidations happen just like that.
Trying small positions for trial and error? Entering during a period of soaring borrowing rates leaves no chance to gradually add positions; in the face of systemic risk, all plans are just jokes.
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BlockchainGriller
· 01-07 07:44
Holding no position is the true wisdom; most people simply can't realize it.
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SolidityJester
· 01-07 07:44
In simple terms, the ability to stay out of the market is a thousand times harder than buying, and most people simply can't do it.
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BearMarketGardener
· 01-07 07:31
The ability to stay out of the market is the key, most people fail because they refuse to cut losses.
To establish a foothold in this market, the first step is to learn how to do subtraction. Most people are obsessed with the thrill of buying, but the truly scarce skill is—knowing when to stay in cash.
Looking at coins like RIVER, during consolidation phases, they often drain your patience and capital. The big trend only appears after the trend becomes clear. Don’t be fooled by hype. When market sentiment is high, coins will be chased; as sentiment cools, the hype dissipates, and funds shift instantly. You can participate, but always be prepared to withdraw.
A volume breakout is not the end; it’s the start of acceleration. Small pullbacks are not reasons to panic; don’t rush to sell just because of minor fluctuations. When projects like BEAT surge fiercely, that’s actually when you should be cautious and defensive—the climax often signals a prelude to a shakeout.
The most efficient way to trade is actually very simple: if the price retraces to support and doesn’t break it, that’s an opportunity; if it hesitates at resistance, it’s time to reduce your position. Short-term trading is about rhythm, not predicting the future. Never go all-in; always start with small positions to test the waters, and increase gradually once the direction is confirmed.
Ultimately, how long you survive determines how much you can earn. The market is always there, but your capital isn’t necessarily. Move slowly and steadily; that’s the way to go further.