The market today was quite volatile, bouncing up and down, but if you look closely, it's just two words: shakeout. The price repeatedly tests key levels, sometimes breaking through and sometimes pulling back, but there's no substantial extension. The volume spikes occur at two main times—either just breaking through a certain hurdle or rapidly pulling back. The structure has yet to form a clear trend signal, and that's the problem.
This kind of market is most likely to wear people out. Trading in and out too frequently will constantly eat into profits through transaction costs, even if you're right about the direction. Many people frequently cut losses and chase highs in the volatility, and in the end, all the profits in their accounts are eaten up by fees and slippage.
There's an old saying that fits perfectly here: the market will eventually move, but your patience must survive first. Instead of recklessly jumping in during the volatility, it's better to wait and see.
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CryptoWageSlave
· 01-06 05:47
Here we go again, after a whole day, the transaction fees eat up half a month's salary. This time, it's really just cutting retail investors.
Just by looking at this analysis, I knew I was going to be washed out, but I still couldn't resist trying to buy the dip.
You're right, if there's no trend, don't move. When will I be able to change this bad habit?
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YieldHunter
· 01-03 23:19
nah honestly, if you're actually tracking the risk-adjusted metrics here, the fee bleed is insane. like technically speaking, most degens are just liquidating their own positions through slippage lmao
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GasFeePhobia
· 01-03 13:50
It's the same old trick again, losing half a month's salary to fees—guess I lose.
Trading costs are really brutal; I always think I've made a profit, but it gets eaten away by slippage.
This market trend is a trap; I advise everyone not to bother anymore. Those who can't hold on will end up crying.
Let's wait and see; rushing won't help anyway. Patience and surviving is the key.
The market swings like this are really annoying. I want to buy when it rises, but it drops immediately. You need to have a strong mind to handle it.
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ser_ngmi
· 01-03 13:41
Bro, that really hits home. Indeed, today a bunch of people got washed out.
Transaction fees are truly invisible knives; frequent trading is just like giving away money.
Let's wait and see. It's better than anything else.
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AirdropHunterXM
· 01-03 13:31
Waiting patiently for the market, don't itch your hands. Not many listen to advice.
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It's the same kind of torturous market again, my little heart can't take it.
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The fees eat up more profit than the market makes, it's hilarious.
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Just want to ask, how many of you can resist chasing the high? Anyway, I can't.
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Really, when I see the K-line during a shakeout, I want to act, but it's always the opposite.
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Every time I say wait and see, but when it actually happens, I can't hold on. I'm too difficult.
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The account is losing this badly, all caused by frequent trading in and out. Who's to blame?
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Trading recklessly without trend signals is just asking for trouble, but who can resist such temptation?
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Slippage and fees are market killers, no doubt.
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Patience, this thing, I've been saving for so many years and still haven't accumulated enough.
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FundingMartyr
· 01-03 13:26
Oh no, it's this frustrating market again, and trading fees are truly the invisible killer.
It's really a test of patience; don't play with it anymore.
I've seen plenty of shakeouts, so I'm just lying flat and waiting for signals.
This market is just an emotion harvesting machine; those chasing highs are crying.
Hold onto your spot holdings and don't move; it's stronger than anything else.
The market today was quite volatile, bouncing up and down, but if you look closely, it's just two words: shakeout. The price repeatedly tests key levels, sometimes breaking through and sometimes pulling back, but there's no substantial extension. The volume spikes occur at two main times—either just breaking through a certain hurdle or rapidly pulling back. The structure has yet to form a clear trend signal, and that's the problem.
This kind of market is most likely to wear people out. Trading in and out too frequently will constantly eat into profits through transaction costs, even if you're right about the direction. Many people frequently cut losses and chase highs in the volatility, and in the end, all the profits in their accounts are eaten up by fees and slippage.
There's an old saying that fits perfectly here: the market will eventually move, but your patience must survive first. Instead of recklessly jumping in during the volatility, it's better to wait and see.