A new year, a new trading system. I divide the funds into three parts to operate.



The first part is dynamic tracking and hunting, accounting for one-third of the investment portfolio. This part does not set predetermined stop-losses and take-profits but adjusts flexibly based on real-time market performance. I will open multiple small positions in batches, then continuously monitor strong performers with rapid upward movement, gradually increasing positions in the most robust ones. At the same time, I will also timely clear out relatively weak holdings or react to extreme situations where prices break through the upper or lower Bollinger Bands.

The second part continues to use grid trading strategies, with another one-third of the funds allocated to $ETH, $BMT, and $TST, maintaining the previous automated operation mode.

The remaining one-third keeps as cash reserves, serving as ammunition for opportunities when they arise. This way, I can participate in the market while maintaining offensive capability at critical moments.
ETH-4.56%
BMT-6.16%
TST-2.84%
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ProbablyNothingvip
· 8h ago
The three-part method sounds good, but I still trust cash reserves a bit more, after all, the market can turn around suddenly.
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GateUser-bd883c58vip
· 01-06 01:59
The three-part method sounds good, but how many can actually stick to it? --- No stop-loss? That's really bold. Hope you don't encounter a black swan. --- Having one-third of your cash reserves is a bit conservative. When will this bear market bottom out? --- Grid trading is the most stable, but it's easy to get repeatedly cut. --- Dynamic tracking sounds exhausting; you have to watch the market constantly. Office workers can't play this. --- Having one-third of your cash just lying around is indeed a smart way to live. --- The no stop-loss approach is only for those who have absolute confidence in their judgment. --- How did you choose between BMT and TST? Is there an insider info, haha? --- This trading style is only for those with enough capital; retail investors can't handle it. --- Following strong-performing stocks and adding positions is a typical chasing-the-rally mentality. Be careful of getting trapped.
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ContractCollectorvip
· 01-05 09:02
One-third hunting, one-third grid, one-third cash? Basically, it's gambling, automation, and waiting for opportunities, a pretty balanced approach. Not setting stop-losses is a bit risky, how do you stay calm when there's floating loss? Grid trading is the most comfortable because you can't tell if you're making money or not. Wait, ETH, BMT, and TST together in a grid? I'm curious about the volatility of BMT and TST. One-third cash is indeed smart; when the bear market comes, others cry while you smile. How long has this system been running, and how are the results?
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NFTRegretfulvip
· 01-05 08:53
The three-part method sounds good, but I have to say no to the part about not setting stop-losses... It might feel great when the market suddenly reverses, but it can also be very painful.
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zkNoobvip
· 01-05 08:43
Haha, putting one-third of the funds into cash is really bold. I'm just worried about the stubbornness of going all in despite the decline. The allocation of funds sounds good, but I'm a bit nervous about the dynamic hunting part without stop-losses. What if the reversal happens too quickly and catches us off guard? I believe in automated grid trading; ETH and these established coins are much more stable. Ammunition is crucial at critical moments, those who understand, understand. This strategy is much more aggressive than last year. New year, new atmosphere?
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SatoshiLeftOnReadvip
· 01-05 08:38
This three-part approach sounds good, but can you really stick to it? I've seen too many people plan perfectly but end up in chaos. Grid trading often turns into manual stop-losses. What happened to the promised automation? I agree with the cash reserve part, but when the market rises, can you really hold without adding positions? I definitely can't hold. Dynamic tracking without stop-losses is a bit risky. A single Bollinger Band breakout could mean gg. The core of this strategy is actually discipline and cash reserves, but discipline is the hardest part.
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