But in reality, most of the time, you're just "playing the odds." What does playing the odds mean? No set rules No clear stop-loss No consistent execution
Doing one thing today, switching it up tomorrow.
When the market's bullish, you snag a little profit, But when the tides turn, you lose it all. This isn't trading; it's randomness.
Real trading is:
You know why you're entering a position. You know when to exit. You know your maximum loss for a trade.
Not:
"I feel like it's about time to jump in."
If you're still on that rollercoaster,
Ask yourself one question:
Are you following a set of rules, or making decisions based on vibes?
Why is it that right after you hit your stop-loss, the market bounces back? It's not that the whales are eyeing your few hundred bucks; it's that you're standing right on the volcano of liquidity.
Understanding "liquidity hunting": When big players want to enter, they need a ton of sell orders; to exit, they need a ton of buy orders. Retail traders' concentrated stop-loss zones are the most crowded buy/sell order areas in the market. The main players spike prices, not to wreck you, but to use your stop-loss orders to fill their large orders.
Put yourself in their shoes: If you were a whale, where would you want to buy? Definitely at the point where everyone is panic-selling. So, seasoned traders look for those spots that seem "certain to drop" but are stuck in low volume; that's where the golden entry points are.
Don't be a "transparent trader": Don't set your stop-loss right at those obvious round numbers (like 60000, 50000). Shift it down a bit or use staggered manual stops. If you can dodge that precise "deep spike," you'll outlast 90% of the crowd.
In summary: In this savage arena, you're either the hunter or the prey. Once you see through the traps of liquidity, you can shift from being "the harvested" to "the follower". #StablR稳定币遭攻击脱锚 $DOGE