The dealer has countless tricks, but one thing is certain: they raise prices to offload and find inexperienced investors to take over.
正经淀粉肠
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$PIPPIN This is a screenshot from yesterday. Looking at it now, it feels like the operator is selling at a high position waiting for retail investors to buy in, while in reality, the traders and whales are the "ant warehouse" of the operator, benefiting both sides. However, my market sense is really bad, so I just want to vent here. Let's see the results tomorrow.
$PIPPIN Once again proving that human nature is malicious Those who are still bearish are definitely the ones going long; no profit, no early rise. The more bears there are, the more they earn. There are also rumors saying that the major investors are offloading, which is purely a scam. If that were true, they would quietly short the market themselves and wouldn't be speaking about it everywhere in the plaza. Anyway, this is how I was misled into shorting.
I won't do empty shanzhai anymore, It's hard work with no reward, Feeling anxious with emptiness in my heart, The more empty it is, the more it rises, In the end, it only drops a little bit🤏, If it's not flat, it rises again, It wasn't easy to hold until the profit and loss were even, As soon as I sell, It plummets immediately.
$PIPPIN After experiencing this painful lesson, I have realized that I must learn to cut losses. However, people are greedy and always think about waiting a little longer. If you wait too long, you won't be able to cut at all. Is there a way to avoid not cutting losses while also avoiding such losses? Yes, but I have always felt that I can't make much money. I rolled 138u to over 500u, but shorting without a stop loss instead led to increasing my position against the trend, pushing me step by step towards the abyss. Fortunately, I did not use leverage and managed to survive for now. With the market's sharp decline, this broken coin will definitely go down as well. Therefore, I will switch to the method I always wanted to do but never did before. Although I might earn less, it is very stable and I won't have to worry much about the risk of liquidation; it's just a matter of how much I earn! I also advise everyone present, those who do not learn to cut losses cannot survive in the contract market, remember, they cannot survive! Cutting losses is painful, drawdowns are common, don't let not cutting losses turn into small losses, small losses into big losses, big losses into stubborn holding, stubborn holding into liquidation. In the end, either leave this market or borrow money to continue gambling, leading to family ruin and lifelong regret.
I hope to hold on until tomorrow; I've lost too much and can't help but enter a cooling-off period.
青蛙哥哥SOS
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Bearish
$PIPPIN This makes it clear at a glance; they are all meme coins of the $SOL series. $PENGU is the leader in Solana, a replica of the trading tactics. Just copy the homework and you’re done. After a surge, there will definitely be a sharp decline, so all you need to do is short and wait for the huge profit.
Holding a single position is not suitable for trading contracts; the aversion to losses is essentially a lack of confidence in one's own ability to make money.
程大事
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The owner was previously a steadfast short position in the air, starting from 88,000 in April, increasing the position to 104,600 for over half a year. This time, initially having a short position at 110,000, it rose to over 116,000. After a pullback to break even, I opened a long position at 110,000, aiming for a quick gain of 1,000 points, but unexpectedly got trapped. Every time I play, my mindset changes, and I end up trading based on emotions, not setting stop losses and resisting the market. I could have exited with an 800 loss when the price pulled back to 106,800, thinking it would rise again. Reluctant to cut losses, I now find myself trapped. A couple of days ago at 91,500, I suggested opening a hedge position; I placed an order at 92,000 that didn’t trigger. Last night, I opened a short position at 82,000, which dropped to 80,600 without closing, and then rose to 85,000, locking me in. Today, I opened a 2,000 U.S. dollar short position at 84,500 and set a stop loss at 84,100, which I closed out. Countless times I thought about opening a 2,000 U.S. dollar position, thinking it could rise back about 2,000 points, but I’m afraid to gamble. It’s too painful; I can only resist. I feel like I’m a hopeless retail trader. I reflected on myself over these past two days; I always like to watch the market closely, and when I open a position, if it moves one or two thousand points, I start to panic. I don’t set take profits or stop losses, and then when I break even, I start to open positions in the opposite direction, completely controlled by my emotions. I’ve been playing like this for so long without making a profit, always being trapped and continuously losing.
That is illogical, pure gambling, small wins and then withdraw.
拿不住研究员
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Don't touch ZEC anymore! The market is too heavily controlled by the big players, leading to dual massacres in both long and short positions. I've already helped everyone step on these mines!
Recently, I took a huge loss on ZEC. Not because of a wrong direction, nor because of poor skills, but because ZEC — completely does not follow common sense.
The K-line you see is not market consensus, it's not support, not a breakout, not a reversal, but rather — pure! big! player! control!
To be honest:
The normal operational logic fails completely when applied to ZEC. If you go long, you get violently smashed, and if you go short, you get instantly blown up. The big players leave no room for survival.
Why is ZEC called a slaughterhouse for retail investors?
① The volatility of ZEC is completely non-linear, and the reversals are extremely fast.
Other coins have signs before a surge or drop, ZEC has no signs, gives no signals, and offers no opportunities.
You see a green bar, it may turn into a spike the next second. You see a downward trend, it may instantly bounce back dozens of points.
It is completely not a normal coin.
② Going short? Be careful of instant reversals — it will blow you up!
ZEC especially loves to: • Suddenly pull a huge bullish candle from the bottom • Directly break through all short stop losses • Lure in longs and then push down • Longs get in and then get harvested
The dual massacre of longs and shorts leaves no survivors.
③ Going long? The big players specifically target the stop loss points of longs
You think the decline is stable? You think you've found support? Sorry, the big players understand the chart better than you do.
A long bearish candle can directly pierce through three moving averages, longs cannot escape and are pressed to the ground for friction.
④ The trading volume and market depth of ZEC are not suitable for retail participation
What you see as "large trading volume"? In reality, it is "big player controlled trading volume."
Retail orders always flow in the opposite direction, you simply cannot keep up with the pace of the big players.
⑤ Retail investors will never learn their lessons from ZEC because it’s too unreasonable
Other coins at least make sense: Patterns, volume, moving averages, support, and resistance all have value.
Only ZEC:
You have logic → you lose. You rely on experience → you lose even faster. You follow the trend → the big players go against you.
I have tried this for everyone, this is "professional level slaughterhouse."