Trading is fundamentally about capturing trends. Without a trend, there is no profit.
Once a major market move starts, any operation is easy; if the market doesn't come, all the fuss is just a waste of energy. So the core logic is very simple—
If you don't see a clear signal, just stay in cash and wait; without a solid profit foundation, absolutely do not add positions. Too many people get stuck on these two points.
In crypto trading, you must dare to earn big. Taking small profits and running is a sickness that needs treatment. The method is actually very simple: when bullish, invest in the strongest coins; when bearish, invest in the weakest coins. Don't overcomplicate trading—just do it straightforwardly.
The key is—frequency must be low, and patience must be maintained.
Only when the strongest trend is fully confirmed should you enter with a normal position. Cut immediately if wrong, risking only small money to survive; hold tightly if right, pushing the risk-reward ratio to the limit, making every trade worthwhile.
Throughout the year, if you can seize three to five such opportunities, the profits will be quite substantial. Furthermore, by seriously trading for a few years and relying on compound interest, upward social mobility is truly not just empty talk.
Don't get stuck in small fluctuations and wear yourself out repeatedly—that's a drain on life. Wait for the wind to come, then soar—market opportunities in crypto are always present; what’s missing is the person willing to break through that window paper.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 12-30 13:49
Sounds good, but how many people can really stick to an all-cash position? I'm that kind of idiot who gets itchy when I don't see the market movement.
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PumpAnalyst
· 12-30 13:46
That's right, but very few people can actually do it...
Waiting for the wind is easy, but the question is how many boring flat periods can you endure? Most people haven't even waited for the wind to blow, and their mindset has already collapsed.
This wave of market is indeed building a bottom, but I see a bunch of people still repeatedly cutting losses at the bottom. Who's to blame?
Hearing that there are three to five opportunities a year sounds easy, but in reality, recognizing them requires going through ten or eight false breakouts. The chives die because they can't tell the difference.
I agree with the statement that the risk-reward ratio is at its limit, but the premise is having enough capital to withstand the drawdown. Without hundreds of thousands, what's the point of talking about compound interest?
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SerumSurfer
· 12-30 13:44
It sounds good, but the key is to hold back and not act.
The ability to wait is really a hundred times harder than the ability to operate.
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GateUser-2fce706c
· 12-30 13:41
Well said, this is exactly what I have been emphasizing—opportunities don't come twice. Those still hesitating over small fluctuations just haven't grasped the big picture.
I saw it three years ago; the real wealth code is right here. Unfortunately, most people are still wasting their lives.
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Chasing every rise and fall every day, isn't that just working for the big players? I've said this before.
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The core is one thing: do you dare to wait for that wave? I’ve already explained this in my previous analysis.
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People who just make a little profit and then run will never turn their fortunes around. If you lack this kind of insight, why even trade?
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Compound interest rolling over, social mobility—basically, it depends on whether you have the patience. Most people don't.
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Low frequency, enough patience—if you truly master these two, earning several times a year is not difficult. But the problem is... can you do it?
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Waiting for the wind to soar? Ha, I've heard that many times, but few people can truly wait it out.
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Don't mess around. Just lock in the strongest opportunity. Everything else is a waste of effort.
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SolidityStruggler
· 12-30 13:25
Waiting for the signal to close the position is fine, but I'm worried that most people can't wait and just get itchy hands to tinker.
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TopBuyerBottomSeller
· 12-30 13:23
You're right, but you need to be patient and not mess around every day.
Trading is fundamentally about capturing trends. Without a trend, there is no profit.
Once a major market move starts, any operation is easy; if the market doesn't come, all the fuss is just a waste of energy. So the core logic is very simple—
If you don't see a clear signal, just stay in cash and wait; without a solid profit foundation, absolutely do not add positions. Too many people get stuck on these two points.
In crypto trading, you must dare to earn big. Taking small profits and running is a sickness that needs treatment. The method is actually very simple: when bullish, invest in the strongest coins; when bearish, invest in the weakest coins. Don't overcomplicate trading—just do it straightforwardly.
The key is—frequency must be low, and patience must be maintained.
Only when the strongest trend is fully confirmed should you enter with a normal position. Cut immediately if wrong, risking only small money to survive; hold tightly if right, pushing the risk-reward ratio to the limit, making every trade worthwhile.
Throughout the year, if you can seize three to five such opportunities, the profits will be quite substantial. Furthermore, by seriously trading for a few years and relying on compound interest, upward social mobility is truly not just empty talk.
Don't get stuck in small fluctuations and wear yourself out repeatedly—that's a drain on life. Wait for the wind to come, then soar—market opportunities in crypto are always present; what’s missing is the person willing to break through that window paper.