Recently, a few trades, to be honest, the profit situation has been relatively average.
First, $LIT. I initially expected a large amount of profit-taking pressure to hit the market, but the single-machine sell-off was actually held back. It dropped from 3 to 2.6, and after hesitating for a while, I decided to take the profit and close the position, ending up with nearly $4,000. Looking back, this trade wasn't particularly special; it was just a timely take-profit to avoid bigger risks.
The situation with $BREV is a bit regrettable. The coin hit my stop-loss level, and later I saw the holder news, so I manually closed the position at 0.4267. I had some expectations for this project early on because the team might have plans for related collaborations, whether it's pre-sales or lock-up mechanisms, which are basically spot direct trading logic. But since there's no activity page online, and the TGE isn't far off, my expectations for day 1 spot trading aren't very optimistic. Honestly, the most frustrating part of this kind of trading is—many group members always want to see when I open a position or chase after a rise. This habit is really bad. The key is, time is often more valuable than price movement. The selling pressure from holders here isn't actually large, and the initial circulating supply was controlled reasonably well. If I had not cut losses decisively, I wouldn't have to worry about the subsequent trend. If I hadn't taken profits in time, the maximum profit would have been only $2,700.
$RAVE went a bit more smoothly, with a profit of $4,900, but I didn't want to hold through the upcoming 1% fee rate, so I closed the position directly.
This year-end trading cycle has basically wrapped up. There were some pullbacks, but luckily no big losses. Let's keep working hard in the new year.
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Recently, a few trades, to be honest, the profit situation has been relatively average.
First, $LIT. I initially expected a large amount of profit-taking pressure to hit the market, but the single-machine sell-off was actually held back. It dropped from 3 to 2.6, and after hesitating for a while, I decided to take the profit and close the position, ending up with nearly $4,000. Looking back, this trade wasn't particularly special; it was just a timely take-profit to avoid bigger risks.
The situation with $BREV is a bit regrettable. The coin hit my stop-loss level, and later I saw the holder news, so I manually closed the position at 0.4267. I had some expectations for this project early on because the team might have plans for related collaborations, whether it's pre-sales or lock-up mechanisms, which are basically spot direct trading logic. But since there's no activity page online, and the TGE isn't far off, my expectations for day 1 spot trading aren't very optimistic. Honestly, the most frustrating part of this kind of trading is—many group members always want to see when I open a position or chase after a rise. This habit is really bad. The key is, time is often more valuable than price movement. The selling pressure from holders here isn't actually large, and the initial circulating supply was controlled reasonably well. If I had not cut losses decisively, I wouldn't have to worry about the subsequent trend. If I hadn't taken profits in time, the maximum profit would have been only $2,700.
$RAVE went a bit more smoothly, with a profit of $4,900, but I didn't want to hold through the upcoming 1% fee rate, so I closed the position directly.
This year-end trading cycle has basically wrapped up. There were some pullbacks, but luckily no big losses. Let's keep working hard in the new year.