Recently saw my fren Awei's operations, and it was quite enlightening.



He previously followed a signal and bought $COAI spot, indeed making some profit at a low entry point, but he didn't sell. As a result, the operator ran away, and the coin price kept declining, with occasional rebounds that were fleeting. His account suffered a loss of over a hundred thousand.

He came to ask for my opinion. I told him very frankly: don't stubbornly hold on to a coin that has no chance, the most regrettable thing in wasting time is not the money, but the cost of time.

He figured it out, cut losses, and the account still has 130,000.

I was observing $Pieverse during that time, and the on-chain capital inflow data looked good, with the support level appearing quite solid. I suggested that he try a long position around 0.25, set a reasonable stop-loss, and aim for a short-term rebound.

As a result, this coin seems to have gone crazy. In five hours, it went straight from 0.25 to 0.6. Awei executed this very well this time, taking profits as planned - 650,000 credited.

The story isn't over yet. The coin price later retraced to 0.33, and we determined there was still an opportunity, so we entered a long position again. This wave brought us another profit of 300,000.

Two operations, less than 24 hours, nearly a million recovery. Awei told me his hands were shaking. I said remember this lesson: only by letting go of what doesn't work can you grasp the new.

After that, he followed the mainstream coins. Entered Ethereum at over 2900, exited at 3050, earning a steady income of 100,000 U.

Awei lamented: "Doing three trades with you is much better than me messing around alone for a year."

I replied to him: It's not who is skilled, it's that you really executed calmly this time. Most people lose, and the loss is emotional.

I am now paying attention to a few potential targets again. If you are also tired of being trapped, being harvested, and being shaken out of the market, you can continue to follow the subsequent shares.

I can't say I'm right every time, but I always clarify the logic, strategy, and execution details in my assessments.

The market is never short of opportunities. What is lacking is those who can calmly seize the opportunities.
COAI0.33%
ETH-0.04%
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SandwichDetector
· 2025-12-01 16:49
It's another one of those stories about "my fren made hundreds of thousands"... That said, the concept of stop loss is indeed a truth, but it's really damn hard to execute.
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RektButSmiling
· 2025-11-29 07:20
To be honest, stop loss is really the hardest thing in investing. Many people just hold on stubbornly, only to realize when it's time to cut losses.
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SchrodingerWallet
· 2025-11-29 07:16
Sounds like another "my fren made a lot of money" story... But that stop loss move was indeed right, better than most people hodling to bankruptcy.
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MEVSandwich
· 2025-11-29 07:15
To be honest, the matter of stop loss really is a matter of life and death. Many people end up dying because they can't let go of these two words, and as a result, they are worn down to death.
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SignatureAnxiety
· 2025-11-29 06:54
To be honest, the stop loss thing really hits hard against reality. Just look at those who stubbornly hold on, in the end, they are losing time.

I've heard many stories about making quick money, but I just don't know how to become that person who makes money.

Emotions are much harder to control than technical analysis. Most of the time, it's just being self-destructive.
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PurpleQiComesFromTheEast369
· 2025-11-29 06:53
You are the richest.
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