I saw a conversation in a trading group where an investor shared his account status: "Total investment of 86,500U, now remaining 27,944U." Behind this statement are 215,000 DOGE, nearly 1 million U of unrealized gains in the past, now turned into silence.



He analyzed the market and said that DOGE can't even hold the middle band of the Bollinger Bands, and with the recent pressure from Japan's interest rate hikes, a sharp plunge or spike could happen at any time. The most heartbreaking part isn't the numbers themselves, but what he said: "My heart is now unmoved"—a true reflection of many retail investors after a massive retracement, from hope to numbness, just a few drops in the market.

This contrast is worth pondering. When high-volatility assets like DOGE fluctuate wildly with candlestick patterns and investors' psychological defenses gradually break down, another path is unfolding: stablecoins and their ecosystem products generating steady income step by step. The story of the former is about "revenge for the principal" and the slaughter of volatility; the latter is about "risk isolation" and slow accumulation.

The cycle of "all-in—cut in half—recoup" versus the path of "stability—interest generation—growth" is not just a comparison of yields, but a contrast of risk psychology. One involves gambling risk, the other liquidity risk. High-volatility assets may turn 100,000 into 1 million, but they can also cause your 1 million to fall back to 100,000; while stable strategies may not make you rich overnight, they can protect your principal during market chaos and grow slowly.

In the face of a brutal market, the way you allocate assets is, to some extent, a choice of survival strategy.
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