Trading Discipline VS Blind Chase, Victory and Defeat Are Already Decided
After years of navigating the crypto market, I have seen too many investors with ample capital flee in panic. A recent experience of a trader left a deep impression: she invested 20,000 yuan, and after three months, her funds shrank to only 600 yuan. In despair, she did not give up but instead spent a month systematically reviewing her trades, then took half a year to turn that 600 yuan into 150,000.
Sounds like a story? Actually, it’s just the routine operation combining cognition and execution. I’ve summarized the principles she later adhered to, all based on practical experience from years of watching the charts.
**Rule 1: During chaotic markets, staying out of the market is the smartest defense**
The crypto market is never short of excitement. Various concepts take turns surging, and beginners are always worried about missing out, often throwing money in blindly. But the reality is: when the K-line oscillates up and down, and the bulls and bears are in fierce opposition, holding cash often yields far better returns than frequent trading.
Early in my career, I lost 40% in a week during a chaotic period due to continuous trading. Only later did I understand: real profit opportunities are not about chasing every small wave but about successfully avoiding deadly traps. When trading volume dries up and moving averages are a mess, waiting is the most rational decision—either do nothing or trade with high probability of success.
**Rule 2: Hot sectors don’t require faith; quick in and out is efficiency**
Whenever a hot concept explodes, there’s always a group of people following with the idea of “holding long-term with faith.” Little do they realize that opportunities in hot assets are often short-lived, not allowing you to wait for “long-term” gains. The real strategy is: enter precisely, profit quickly, and exit decisively.
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rugpull_ptsd
· 11h ago
Tsk, yet another story of "my friend turned 600 into 150,000"... Hearing it so often gets a bit tiring.
Talking about staying out of the market is easy, but how many can really resist? Anyway, every time I try to wait for high-probability results, I just end up FOMOing.
Quick in and out of hot tracks? Ha, that depends on luck. It always feels like once you enter, you're trapped.
This theory isn't wrong, but when it comes to actual trading, your mind turns to mush. As the old saying goes—easy to understand, hard to implement.
Honestly, discipline is something you can't really learn without blowing up your account a few times. My blood, sweat, and tears are proof of that.
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BlockImposter
· 11h ago
Turning 600 into 150,000 sounds pretty impressive, but the key is having the right mindset. Most people would have given up long before reaching this point of loss.
Trading Discipline VS Blind Chase, Victory and Defeat Are Already Decided
After years of navigating the crypto market, I have seen too many investors with ample capital flee in panic. A recent experience of a trader left a deep impression: she invested 20,000 yuan, and after three months, her funds shrank to only 600 yuan. In despair, she did not give up but instead spent a month systematically reviewing her trades, then took half a year to turn that 600 yuan into 150,000.
Sounds like a story? Actually, it’s just the routine operation combining cognition and execution. I’ve summarized the principles she later adhered to, all based on practical experience from years of watching the charts.
**Rule 1: During chaotic markets, staying out of the market is the smartest defense**
The crypto market is never short of excitement. Various concepts take turns surging, and beginners are always worried about missing out, often throwing money in blindly. But the reality is: when the K-line oscillates up and down, and the bulls and bears are in fierce opposition, holding cash often yields far better returns than frequent trading.
Early in my career, I lost 40% in a week during a chaotic period due to continuous trading. Only later did I understand: real profit opportunities are not about chasing every small wave but about successfully avoiding deadly traps. When trading volume dries up and moving averages are a mess, waiting is the most rational decision—either do nothing or trade with high probability of success.
**Rule 2: Hot sectors don’t require faith; quick in and out is efficiency**
Whenever a hot concept explodes, there’s always a group of people following with the idea of “holding long-term with faith.” Little do they realize that opportunities in hot assets are often short-lived, not allowing you to wait for “long-term” gains. The real strategy is: enter precisely, profit quickly, and exit decisively.