Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
"The essence of holding a position is not admitting you're wrong."
Have you ever taken a trade like this:
When you first entered, you were very confident.
Clear logic, a definite direction, and even calculated your profit margin in your mind.
But not long after, the market started moving against you.
At first, you stayed calm.
You glanced at the chart and thought:
"Not a big deal, just normal fluctuations."
Then, as it moved further, you began to comfort yourself:
"It might be a shakeout."
And as it moved even more, you started feeling uncomfortable.
But you wouldn't close the position.
Because you started thinking:
👉 What if I close now and it rebounds?
So you choose to hold on.
—
By this point, you're no longer really trading.
You're answering a multiple-choice question:
Admit you're wrong now,
Or gamble on it coming back.
—
Many people choose the latter.
Not because it's more reasonable,
But because it feels better.
Admitting you're wrong is hard.
Losing money is even harder.
But the hardest part is accepting:
👉 This trade was my mistake.
—
So you start procrastinating.
You stop asking yourself:
"Should I keep this position or not?"
And instead look at:
👉 Does it still have a chance to recover?
—
At this point, your logic has already changed.
Initially, you took this trade because of the opportunity.
Now, you're holding it because you can't bear to let go.
—
What happens next, everyone has experienced:
The market continues to move against you, and you become more anxious.
Floating losses grow larger, and you start reducing your screen time.
You stop analyzing and just wait.
Waiting for a "point to cut loss."
—
But the problem is:
The market isn't here to help you get out.
—
The longer you wait, the further away it gets.
The longer you hold, the more intense the move.
Until one day, when you open your account, you realize:
You're not thinking about how much you can make.
You're only thinking:
👉 Can I still survive?
—
Many people think they were beaten by the market.
But that's not true.
Your real turning point was that very first moment:
👉 You knew it was wrong, but you didn't close.
—
Holding a position is never because you saw the right move.
It's because, at that moment,
You made a choice:
👉 Not to admit you're wrong.
—
You’re not unaware of the risks.
You just think:
If I wait a little longer, maybe it will turn around.
But the cruelest part of trading is here:
👉 "Waiting a little longer" often marks the start of losing control.
—
Even experts can be wrong.
But their only difference from ordinary traders is:
They don’t procrastinate.
If they’re wrong, they end it.
And wait for the next opportunity.
—
Ordinary traders:
Wrong → Unwilling to accept → Hold → Losses grow bigger
Experts:
Wrong → End it → Reset → Start over
—
You might think the difference is in skill.
But actually, it all comes down to one thing:
👉 Can you admit you're wrong when you should?
—
So next time you encounter a trade:
That’s clearly wrong,
But you’re hesitating,
Stop looking at the chart.
Ask yourself:
👉 Are you trading right now,
Or just unwilling to admit you're wrong?
If it’s the latter,
Then the outcome of this trade is already decided.
—
📌 The 55th conclusion of the Commitment Trading Philosophy:
Holding a position isn’t because you saw the right move.
It’s because you’re unwilling to admit you’re wrong.
— MK Commitment