Let's talk about a heart-wrenching fact: retail investors lose money, and many times they are planted on the three words "too anxious".
When you are bearish, you can't help it as soon as you drop a wave: "It should be almost there, right?" ——Buy the bottom to enter the market. When it went up, I just pulled it up and thought, "This must be a pullback!" ——Hurry to short. This style of play has a professional term, called left-side trading. To put it bluntly, it is to guess the inflection point and bet on the reversal.
Another way of life is called right-hand trading. Fall? Don't rush, wait until it really stops falling. Rose? Don't panic, wait for the trend to be confirmed before getting on the bus. The core logic is four words: follow the trend.
Left-hand trading sounds cool, and it's really cool to copy to the end. But the problem is that it eats experience, and the risk is huge. Without two brushes, I was taught to be a person by the market in minutes. And you must strictly stop the loss, otherwise you can be scrapped at one time.
There are too many trades on the right side. Following the general trend, although you can't eat the fattest bite of meat, at least you won't be buried.
Speaking of which, I have to mention the 1011 thunderstorm. How many people rushed in to buy the bottom after that? The result? In less than two months, the new coins listed on a leading exchange were cut in half and then cut in half. Especially if you play perpetual contracts, you really need to be careful. The contract is never more accurate than anyone's guess, but more slower, longer to live, and in the right direction than whoever dies.
My position was cleared early at that time, and I ran to toss the small coins on the chain. Although he is not very good at playing, he is lucky, and Hakiminawa ate 30 times, which can be regarded as making up for the previous loss.
Right now? I think the timing is almost right. Prepare to open ETH positions in batches and lay them out slowly.
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AltcoinMarathoner
· 2h ago
ngl, right-side trading is basically the ultra-marathon meta... sprint traders blow up, accumulators stack through cycles. been there, done that with the left-side rekt arc tbh.
Reply0
LayerZeroHero
· 2h ago
Really, left-hand trading is a bet on reversal, and a wrong top will give you a waste
View OriginalReply0
GasOptimizer
· 2h ago
Really, left-hand trading is betting on reversals, and if you don't grasp it, you will be beaten by the market.
View OriginalReply0
QuorumVoter
· 2h ago
Left-hand trading sounds cool, but when something really happens, you know what it means to be beaten by the market. It's better to trade on the right side honestly, the most important thing is to live a long time.
Let's talk about a heart-wrenching fact: retail investors lose money, and many times they are planted on the three words "too anxious".
When you are bearish, you can't help it as soon as you drop a wave: "It should be almost there, right?" ——Buy the bottom to enter the market. When it went up, I just pulled it up and thought, "This must be a pullback!" ——Hurry to short. This style of play has a professional term, called left-side trading. To put it bluntly, it is to guess the inflection point and bet on the reversal.
Another way of life is called right-hand trading. Fall? Don't rush, wait until it really stops falling. Rose? Don't panic, wait for the trend to be confirmed before getting on the bus. The core logic is four words: follow the trend.
Left-hand trading sounds cool, and it's really cool to copy to the end. But the problem is that it eats experience, and the risk is huge. Without two brushes, I was taught to be a person by the market in minutes. And you must strictly stop the loss, otherwise you can be scrapped at one time.
There are too many trades on the right side. Following the general trend, although you can't eat the fattest bite of meat, at least you won't be buried.
Speaking of which, I have to mention the 1011 thunderstorm. How many people rushed in to buy the bottom after that? The result? In less than two months, the new coins listed on a leading exchange were cut in half and then cut in half. Especially if you play perpetual contracts, you really need to be careful. The contract is never more accurate than anyone's guess, but more slower, longer to live, and in the right direction than whoever dies.
My position was cleared early at that time, and I ran to toss the small coins on the chain. Although he is not very good at playing, he is lucky, and Hakiminawa ate 30 times, which can be regarded as making up for the previous loss.
Right now? I think the timing is almost right. Prepare to open ETH positions in batches and lay them out slowly.