When I first got into the crypto world, many people go through a stage: staring at the charts every day, chasing pumps and selling dumps, jumping in when they see an opportunity—then they end up making money more slowly and losing it faster.



Later, I gradually realized: if you want to last in the market, it’s not frequent trading that matters, but a set of stable trading habits.

First, don’t trade when emotions are most likely to run hot
When news is everywhere and the market is swinging wildly, it’s easiest to impulsively open positions. Wait until the market rhythm becomes clearer, and then look for opportunities—it’s actually more likely you’ll make the right judgment$ZEC

Second, if you’ve made profit, learn how to protect it
Don’t always think about taking the whole move in one bite. Many people aren’t unable to make money—they just can’t bear to leave after they’ve made it, and then a single pullback gives back all the profits$SNDK

Third, don’t trade based on feelings
Before entering, look at the trend, indicators, and key levels/positions. At least get multiple signals confirming before you consider participating. Don’t change your plan just because of a single candlestick.

Fourth, stop-losses must be set in advance
Protect profits when you’re winning; control losses when you’re losing. Trades without stop-losses will eventually turn into being stuck holding positions passively$CL

Fifth, regularly realize a portion of the gains
The numbers in your account don’t equal the real money you’ve made. Appropriately lock in profits, leave yourself a safety cushion—then you can become stable and sustainable over the long term.

Investing isn’t about desperately trading every day; it’s about rules and discipline.
When your trading pace stabilizes and your mindset stabilizes, your account will naturally get better over time.

#PreIPOs第二期OpenAI认购

#盘前合约上线长鑫存储

#韩国KOSPI暴跌5%触发熔断
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pinned