Been putting in serious screen time these past few days—running through plenty of trades and wanted to share a quick update on my journaling approach. Looking forward to your thoughts on how I'm tracking everything.
Mixed in some classical Fibonacci setups, but honestly shifted focus toward catching those early movers—you know, those runners that spike quick ($fkh being one of them). The pattern's become clearer: nail the early entry, let it run.
Here's the thing though—every time the trading bag grows, you unlock more capital to actually size into these early plays properly. That's when things get interesting. Can't chase runners on fumes; you need the ammunition to capitalize when the setup hits.
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rugpull_survivor
· 01-12 12:46
NGL, early entry is definitely the right approach, but the key is how many people can really withstand that pullback...
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rug_connoisseur
· 01-12 12:43
I'm also considering the early entry strategy, but honestly, can you hold steady with something like $fkh... That kind of rapid surge carries a bit of risk.
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GasFeeCrybaby
· 01-12 12:40
Nah, this logic is actually compound interest thinking. The bigger the account, the more it can work. To put it simply, if you don't have money, don't mess around.
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ForumLurker
· 01-12 12:40
Early intervention indeed requires capital support; otherwise, it's just armchair strategizing.
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MemeCoinSavant
· 01-12 12:37
tbh the "ammunition" thesis here is just cope for not having enough dry powder to begin with, but the memetic velocity of early runners does follow a statistically significant p-value... probably. $fkh runners tho? that's just gambling with extra steps and a spreadsheet 📊
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ruggedNotShrugged
· 01-12 12:33
This guy is right, early entry is really key, just worried about not having any bullets in hand.
Been putting in serious screen time these past few days—running through plenty of trades and wanted to share a quick update on my journaling approach. Looking forward to your thoughts on how I'm tracking everything.
Mixed in some classical Fibonacci setups, but honestly shifted focus toward catching those early movers—you know, those runners that spike quick ($fkh being one of them). The pattern's become clearer: nail the early entry, let it run.
Here's the thing though—every time the trading bag grows, you unlock more capital to actually size into these early plays properly. That's when things get interesting. Can't chase runners on fumes; you need the ammunition to capitalize when the setup hits.