These past two days, meme market screens have gotten hot again. To put it plainly: once the narrative gets going and you’re swept up, it’s easiest for your stop-loss to get canceled/removed by you yourself. My approach is kind of old-school: before entering the trade, I set in writing exactly “how much I can lose at most,” then I split the position into smaller parts. I’d rather get knocked out by a few small stop-outs than let a single larger drawdown take my emotions with it—especially for cross-chain-related memes. They’re more like a puzzle: if one chain is missing some liquidity, or the bridge has a bit of bad weather warning, the drop can happen faster than you’d imagine.



Lately, all the talk about AI agents and automated trading has been pretty loud too. Some people treat it as a narrative amplifier, while others are genuinely digging into contract permissions and the signature path. Either way, whenever I see “automatic interaction,” I treat it as a risk asset first: check the permissions and whether it’s revocable, and don’t hand your stop-loss to a robot you can’t even understand. That’s how I’m handling it for now.
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