Seeing the words "stable income," I will now pause for a moment.


It's not that you definitely can't do it, but first ask three questions:
Where is the money placed?
Where does the return come from?
Who bears the worst-case scenario?
There are many pitfalls in the crypto world, not just high risk written on it.
Precisely because it looks the most stable and most like financial management, it’s the easiest to let your guard down.
For any stable income product, I always break it down into four layers:
What is the underlying asset?
What is the source of the return?
Are there any deadlines, redemption, and liquidity restrictions?
In extreme cases, who is the counterparty?
The annualized figure is just superficial.
What really matters is: is this return earned by taking risks you can't see?
If you can't ask clearly, it's better to go slower.
Many big losses in investing are not because you didn't see the opportunity, but because you mistook "risks you don't understand" for "stable income."
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