What are the common phenomena among retail investors in the crypto world? Staring at the charts every day, frequently switching coins, busy as a bee, yet their accounts are slowly declining. Some say it's because the market is poor and opportunities are scarce, but the truth is often not that simple—the problem isn't the market itself, but the flawed entry logic from the very beginning.
To achieve stable profits, you must first learn to avoid the most common mistakes. These 7 points are worth keeping in mind:
**1. Stay away from coins in long-term sideways consolidation** When the price remains stagnant for a long time, it's not necessarily undervalued; rather, there is simply no capital willing to buy in. Funds always chase trending assets with volume; those stagnant, dead-water types only waste your time.
**2. Follow the core leading assets of the main trend** Funds in each cycle tend to flow first into the strongest leaders. Those seemingly cheap non-top-tier coins are actually the riskiest and most likely to be abandoned. Instead of trying to chase cheap gains and catch up, focus on the certainty of the leading coins' returns.
**3. Always leave an exit route for your funds** Going all-in and risking everything in one shot can lead to complete elimination if you make a mistake. Capital is for survival, not to show courage. Building positions gradually and managing your holdings carefully are the safest ways for ordinary traders to achieve stable profits.
**4. Don't hold long-term positions before the trend is clear** Before the overall market trend is truly formed, take profits when you can and reduce costs when possible. Don't treat short-term fluctuations as faith to be stubbornly held through.
**5. Understand candlestick patterns before acting** Long lower shadows reflect strong support at low levels, solid bullish candles show the strength of the bulls. True opportunities are reflected in technical features on the chart, not in emotional reactions.
**6. Breakouts with volume at key levels are the real signals** When the price breaks above important moving averages with volume, it's a market filtering signal. Hesitant traders are still debating a pullback, while decisive traders have already seized the opportunity.
**7. The rebound after repeated tests at the bottom is the most worth following** The positions where major players repeatedly test the bottom are the true risk boundaries. Once risks are fully absorbed, the market trend will truly unfold.
Trading is not about who has the bigger guts, but about who makes fewer mistakes. Avoid these pitfalls, follow the flow of funds, and you'll naturally stand on the profitable side.
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BearHugger
· 01-06 23:31
Going all-in with full position is really the biggest pitfall in the crypto world; I've seen many people lose everything in one shot.
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MEVHunter
· 01-05 10:53
Well said, capital flow is the key. Those dead coins stuck in consolidation are just draining your gas fees.
Those going all-in are just trying to gamble, and they get liquidated quickly. I still prefer to manage positions in parts to reduce risk exposure.
Only when there’s a volume breakout at key levels is there arbitrage potential. While those small investors are still waiting for a pullback, I’ve already entered the market.
The leading coin has the strongest certainty. Don’t fight short-term fluctuations; it’s easy to get caught in MEV.
Honestly, understanding candlestick patterns is much more reliable than watching emotions. The market won’t lie.
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BlockchainArchaeologist
· 01-05 10:52
That really hits home. I used to watch the market and swap coins every day, and only after my account shrank by one-third in a month did I wake up.
Going all-in with a full position is a bloody lesson.
The leader is the way to go. Don't be greedy for those cheap trash coins.
Breaking out with volume at key levels is really effective. I've tried it a few times and nailed the timing.
Sideways coins are truly a waste of life. It's safer to follow the capital flow.
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LiquidatedNotStirred
· 01-05 10:42
Sounds nice, but how many can really follow through... I'm that kind of fool who watches the market every day.
When the leading coin skyrockets, I was trading air coins; when the air coins get halved, I start chasing the leaders—master of perfect reverse operations.
Full position? That feeling is truly exhilarating, I remember it forever after just once.
Watching candlesticks? I mainly look at the top gainers leaderboard, honestly.
What are the common phenomena among retail investors in the crypto world? Staring at the charts every day, frequently switching coins, busy as a bee, yet their accounts are slowly declining. Some say it's because the market is poor and opportunities are scarce, but the truth is often not that simple—the problem isn't the market itself, but the flawed entry logic from the very beginning.
To achieve stable profits, you must first learn to avoid the most common mistakes. These 7 points are worth keeping in mind:
**1. Stay away from coins in long-term sideways consolidation**
When the price remains stagnant for a long time, it's not necessarily undervalued; rather, there is simply no capital willing to buy in. Funds always chase trending assets with volume; those stagnant, dead-water types only waste your time.
**2. Follow the core leading assets of the main trend**
Funds in each cycle tend to flow first into the strongest leaders. Those seemingly cheap non-top-tier coins are actually the riskiest and most likely to be abandoned. Instead of trying to chase cheap gains and catch up, focus on the certainty of the leading coins' returns.
**3. Always leave an exit route for your funds**
Going all-in and risking everything in one shot can lead to complete elimination if you make a mistake. Capital is for survival, not to show courage. Building positions gradually and managing your holdings carefully are the safest ways for ordinary traders to achieve stable profits.
**4. Don't hold long-term positions before the trend is clear**
Before the overall market trend is truly formed, take profits when you can and reduce costs when possible. Don't treat short-term fluctuations as faith to be stubbornly held through.
**5. Understand candlestick patterns before acting**
Long lower shadows reflect strong support at low levels, solid bullish candles show the strength of the bulls. True opportunities are reflected in technical features on the chart, not in emotional reactions.
**6. Breakouts with volume at key levels are the real signals**
When the price breaks above important moving averages with volume, it's a market filtering signal. Hesitant traders are still debating a pullback, while decisive traders have already seized the opportunity.
**7. The rebound after repeated tests at the bottom is the most worth following**
The positions where major players repeatedly test the bottom are the true risk boundaries. Once risks are fully absorbed, the market trend will truly unfold.
Trading is not about who has the bigger guts, but about who makes fewer mistakes. Avoid these pitfalls, follow the flow of funds, and you'll naturally stand on the profitable side.