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#美联储降息 Playing with coins until I had an epiphany, I finally understood that this is like the moment of enlightenment in martial arts novels. $LIGHT
I still remember the early days, just like most beginners—relying on luck for profits and losses, reading candlestick charts like reading a celestial book, let alone understanding any patterns.
But after a few years of persistence, learning from veterans, and repeatedly summarizing and refining my strategies, I finally developed my own set of tactics.
**The Morning Market Is the Most Honest**
The morning session often reflects the true trend. Don't panic when prices fall—it's likely a window for low-price accumulation; don't rush to chase when prices rise—taking profits promptly is more reliable than dreaming of tenfold gains.
**The Afternoon Tests Your Patience**
In the afternoon, sudden surges or flash crashes often occur, making it easy to be emotionally hijacked. Don't be greedy at high levels; wait for a pullback to buy again. Don't be timid during declines; wait until stability returns. Patient traders often seize better entry opportunities.
**When the Downtrend Comes, Stand Firm First**
A morning correction is normal; don't panic and sell in a hurry. The crypto market changes rapidly—sometimes just waiting half an hour can completely reverse the situation.
**Discipline Is More Valuable Than Prediction**
Set your entry and exit points in advance, and stick to them until the right moment. Especially during sideways and choppy markets, controlling your hands is crucial—observation isn't missing out, but protecting yourself.
**Learn to Use Candlestick Yin-Yang Transitions**
When a bearish candle stabilizes, consider light positioning; when a bullish candle reaches a high, reduce positions gradually. Don't obsess over the exact bottom or top—earning profits from the middle range is enough.
**Contrarian Thinking Holds Opportunities**
Stay calm during market frenzy; be composed when others panic. Often, the next wave of opportunity is brewing in the corners that no one pays attention to.
Markets always cycle endlessly, but your capital can't withstand countless mistakes. What truly lasts with you isn't a single divine judgment, but a trading rhythm and habit that let you sleep peacefully. Slow down a bit, and you'll actually move faster.
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Under the expectation of Federal Reserve rate cuts, the window for T trading is indeed open, but my quantitative model shows that the current bottoming pattern is not yet stable enough.
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It's the same explanation again, is the morning session the most honest? I think it's the time when retail investors are most easily hammered, don't be fooled.
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From a technical perspective, the theory of yin and yang transformation makes sense, but the problem is how do you determine where the bottom is? That's the gambler's mentality at work.
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Discipline is indeed more valuable than predictions, but most people say this when they've already gone bankrupt, including myself once.
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The saying to stay calm during market frenzy is correct, but who can really do that when the moment comes? I can't, I can only rely on stop-loss to save my life.
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Feels like we're talking about the same stuff from 2017 again. Now that the crypto market structure has changed, these experiences might be outdated.
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I have to admit, I was reckless before. Every time it was sideways trading, I wanted to do something, but it all ended up costing me tuition fees.
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The phrase "honesty in the morning" really hit me. Watching the market early in the morning is indeed more effective than looking at a bunch of flashy indicators.
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I've experienced situations where the market reversed after half an hour. At the time, I thought it was over and sold at the floor price, almost driving myself crazy.
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Greedy at lows, timid at highs—it's easy to say but really difficult to do, it's like hell to execute.
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I agree with the concept of contrarian thinking, but I am just a reverse indicator myself. I tend to lose the most when I stay calm.
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I also didn't follow $LIGHT's recent trend; I just listened to the insights, but my account still hasn't gained anything.
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Being a bit slower can actually make you faster. I've heard this countless times, but I just can't change this bad habit.
Sounds convincing, but the broken signals of the pattern are right there. Does anyone really follow this copy-paste? Nine times out of ten, it's still leek mentality
Is "controlling your own hands" a probabilistic strategy? The technical aspect can't support this expectation at all. The interesting levels have long passed
Consolidation is dead? No, that's called stalemate before risk release. Without bottom divergence, daring to say the opportunity has arrived. I suggest checking the market sentiment indicators first
This round of Fed rate cuts indeed changed the rhythm, but the premise of capturing mid-range profits is that you must understand the pattern; otherwise, you'll only suffer losses