A certain wallet repeatedly performs a dangerous trading pattern:
Single large positions crushing a single asset, repeatedly all-in on hot coins, chasing "guaranteed profit" trends.
Where is the problem? In these markets: - Information has long been public - Prices have already fully reflected the news - The profit ceiling is tightly capped - But losses can wipe everything out
The confidence of "I'm very sure" is precisely the most dangerous signal. Confidence and win rate are worlds apart. When you feel you must all-in, that's often the time to reduce your position.
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BlockchainTherapist
· 01-07 15:56
The moment of going all-in is really the time to run.
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RadioShackKnight
· 01-07 10:02
It's the same old trick again. Going all-in on one coin makes you think you've made a fortune, but it results in a complete liquidation. Confidence really can kill people.
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FundingMartyr
· 01-05 10:57
Why does this guy keep making the same mistake... When going all-in, he's the most confident; when losing everything, he's the clearest. The funny thing is, he has to start all over again next time.
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LiquidityNinja
· 01-05 10:56
Really? I've seen this all-in logic too many times, and it usually doesn't end well.
The bigger the risk, the more dangerous it is. Basically, it's just overconfidence.
Reducing your position is the art of survival, not cowardice.
Those chasing hot coins always end up holding the bag—that's the truth.
Information and public prices reflect the value early on. Still going all-in is truly a gambler's mentality.
The ceiling is capped, but total wipeout is possible. This deal is not worth it at all.
Haha, this is a typical gambler's mentality—thinking you can see through the market, but then losing everything in one wave.
The moment you go all-in should be a warning sign; nine out of ten people die like that.
All the information is public, and the prices already reflect everything. What’s left to make money? It’s just gambling on probabilities.
Confidence in the crypto world is like poison. I’ve seen too many people say, "I’m very confident," only to end up with a "disaster."
Reducing your position is really the most difficult operation—harder than going all-in.
A certain wallet repeatedly performs a dangerous trading pattern:
Single large positions crushing a single asset, repeatedly all-in on hot coins, chasing "guaranteed profit" trends.
Where is the problem? In these markets:
- Information has long been public
- Prices have already fully reflected the news
- The profit ceiling is tightly capped
- But losses can wipe everything out
The confidence of "I'm very sure" is precisely the most dangerous signal. Confidence and win rate are worlds apart. When you feel you must all-in, that's often the time to reduce your position.