QuietAlphaClerk

vip
Age 0.1 Year
Peak Tier 0
No courses for sale, just keeping records: protocol parameters, liquidation points, funding rates. If I spot a small opportunity, I'll let friends know, but I won't give trading signals.
Lately, dealing with multi-chain wallets has been a bit frustrating: assets are spread across several chains and multiple addresses, and even though the total amount isn't large, clicking around feels like playing a game of spot the difference... I’ve decided to be more straightforward now: one "main wallet" only holds long-term positions, almost never signs transactions with unfamiliar contracts; one "active wallet" is dedicated to interactions, claiming airdrops, and onboarding new protocols; and I keep a separate "deposit and withdrawal wallet." When I hear news about regional tax increases
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Recently, the group discussed block builders and bundles again. Honestly, retail investors don't need to memorize the MEV paper. You only need to know two points: 1) When you click "market price / chase the rise and fall," you might get cut in line or sandwich attacked, so don't use too aggressive slippage, and don't rush in when liquidity is thin; 2) For large transactions, try to split them up or use protected routing / limit orders to reduce the space for others to sandwich you. As for how builders package bundles or who follows private flow... just get a basic understanding, don't be foole
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These days, some people are again watching on-chain large transfers and abnormal movements in exchange hot and cold wallets, calling them "smart money." I also pay attention, but more often I treat it as a thermometer of market sentiment... Going back to LST/re-staking, the main sources of yield are basically two parts: the basic rewards from underlying staking + the extra subsidy you get by lending out the "security/validation rights."
The latter is what seems attractive, but it's also where the pitfalls are—staking the same collateral multiple times, and in extreme situations, it's not jus
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Lately, I've seen everyone talk about whether a major public chain upgrade/maintenance might trigger project migrations, but I’ve actually gone back to check my own "key management" first... No matter how lively the chain gets, if you lose your private key, you're completely offline.
My personal feeling is: for assets that aren't large and operations that are frequent, a hardware wallet is enough to start with, at least to reduce the risk of accidentally authorizing the wrong transaction with a hot wallet; once assets reach a higher level, multi-signature is more reassuring, but daily transfer
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