🚀 #GateNewbieVillageEpisode5 ✖️ @Surrealist5N1K
💬 Stay clear-headed in a bull market, calm in a bear market.
Share your trading journey | Discuss strategies | Grow with the Gate Family
⏰ Event Time: Nov 5 10:00 – Nov 12 26:00 UTC
How to Join:
1️⃣ Follow Gate_Square + @Surrealist5N1K
2️⃣ Post on Gate Square with the hashtag #GateNewbieVillageEpisode5
3️⃣ Share your trading experiences, insights, or growth stories
— The more genuine and insightful your post, the higher your chance to win!
🎁 Rewards
3 lucky participants → Gate X RedBull Cap + $20 Position Voucher
If delivery is unavailable, th
#隐私币生态普涨 Why do you always lose money in the crypto world? To be honest, it might not be bad luck.
The data is here: 90% of retail investors are losing money in the long run. But where exactly is the problem?
First, let's talk about the first fatal flaw—emotional trading. Getting anxious to cash out when it rises by 5%, but stubbornly holding on and refusing to cut losses when it drops by 40%. This is not investing; it's self-sabotage. The market won't stop falling just because you're reluctant. If you don't cut losses when you should, turning a small loss into a big pit is only a matter of time.
The second more common one is the superstition about so-called "sure-win indicators". Every day, they study various technical analysis tools, almost treating charts like treasure maps to decipher. But they can't even understand the basic capital flow, yet they want to rely on a few moving averages to grasp the wealth code? The indicators available in the market have long been overused, and truly effective strategies won't teach you for free.
The third situation is the most dangerous - treating crypto trading like gambling. Jumping in with heavy investments, fantasizing about doubling your money in one go. With this mindset, even if you occasionally make a profit, in the end, you will lose both your principal and your gains. The market loves to exploit this kind of gambler's mentality.
Want to survive in this market? First, fill these three pits. Control your emotions, understand the logic, manage your positions — it sounds simple, but less than one in ten can actually do it.