#gStocks代币化股票上线


Many people are not incapable of trading, but as they go along, their rhythm gets thrown off.
At the beginning, they can still operate according to the plan, taking one trade at a time slowly.
After making a few winning trades, they start adding positions, switching coins, chasing hot trends, making over a dozen trades a day, as if trying to catch every market move.
In the end? Within less than half a month, the account is back to square one.
The problem is actually not the market conditions, nor the technique, but three words: too many moves.
Later, I only asked him to change three things.
First, focus on only one coin.
Don't trade one today and another tomorrow.
Get thoroughly familiar with the trend and rhythm of one coin first; it's easier to make money than switching targets every day.
Second, at most two trades per day.
Opportunities are not gained by trading more, but by trading correctly.
With fewer moves, impulsive actions naturally decrease.
Third, exit when the loss reaches the planned stop.
Don't hold losing positions, don't add to losing positions, don't fight the market.
Admit when the direction is wrong, stop, and wait for new opportunities.
At first, he was very uncomfortable, always feeling that this was too slow and that profit efficiency was too low.
But after three months, the account gradually recovered from the low point to over 20k USDT.
There was no windfall, no miracle, just steady accumulation trade by trade.
Later, he said a sentence that I've remembered until now: "Making money depends on opportunities, but preserving profits relies on restraint."
Many people are not lacking the ability to make money, but they cannot stop.
When they make a little, they want to make more; when they lose a little, they rush to recover. Once the rhythm is disrupted, the money they earned earlier is quickly given back to the market.
The more frequently you trade, the more chances you have to make mistakes; the more you want to turn around quickly, the easier it is to make consecutive mistakes.
In the end, trading is not about who caught the most opportunities, but about who can consistently execute according to their own rules.
If you are also trading frequently and getting more chaotic, you might as well slow down the pace first.
Taking fewer trades, patiently waiting for opportunities, and doing each trade well is far more likely to grow your account than making over a dozen trades a day.
You don't lack opportunities; what you lack is the courage to take that first step.
Stop hesitating. To find the rhythm of turning things around, start following Nanbei.
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