Just saw it! It's over 10,000! I'm going to show off! It seems that except for Binance's official live broadcast. No individual anchor has exceeded 10,000! Am I the first one? Hahaha!
The short position near $ETH 2985 seems fine. It was also mentioned in the live broadcast that the ETH short position should align with the BTC levels. If the BTC market moves too slowly, the ETH levels should be adjusted upward. When aligning with BTC, it is close to 89k. As for the BTC orders, the closer it gets to 89k, the more it can be shorted, for example, 888-885. Just set the stop-loss at 89. This is all market information discussed in the live broadcast.
$ETH Tonight's live broadcast order 30u+ profit secured. Set the order before going offline, wake up and take the profit directly, wake up to collect the money
$ASTER still has 'Liang Xi', the standout in the human trader sector. $16,200. 4 days to reach 102k. The key point is the trading volume of $65 million, which is outrageous, simply a central bank trading brush.
In trading, the most valuable thing is: less self and more observation In the cryptocurrency market, losing money is often not due to a lack of analysis, but rather overconfidence in one's own feelings. The market is clearly strengthening, yet you insist that 'after such a rise, a pullback is certain'; The structure has clearly weakened, yet you are still fantasizing that 'the big players are washing the market.' To put it bluntly: You are not trading; you are in a relationship with your own biases. Strength is strength, don’t add drama to yourself Volume breaks, retracements hold, and higher lows are established— this is strength. But many people start to panic as soon as they see strength:
《 Don't Use All Your Capital to Validate a Judgment 》
—Starting with Livermore's first bankruptcy in 1898 In 1898, 21-year-old Jesse Livermore experienced his first true 'zero' in his trading career. It was not because he couldn't read the market; on the contrary—his judgment at that time was correct. The problem lay in one thing: He used all his capital to validate a judgment. That year, Livermore had already made quite a bit of money in the speculative market with 'market dynamics and rhythm', and his confidence rapidly inflated. He firmly believed he had grasped the essence of the market, thus making a mistake that all new geniuses tend to commit:
In the crypto world, surviving is more important than jumping high There are seven-foot barriers in the crypto world every day. What does seven feet mean? It's that kind of opportunity that makes your heart race when you see it: Go all in, double up and take off 50x leverage, a single needle changes your life This position is not bottom-fishing, then you're not a crypto person To be honest, it looks appealing. But if you think carefully, how many can really jump over? Old investors understand: those who die fastest jump highest The one thing beginners love to do is: Challenge the limits. Chasing highs with emotions on your shoulders, Holding on to losses without stopping out, Imagining yourself as that 1% chosen one.
《Against Human Nature is the Beginning of a Turnaround》
The vast majority of people in the cryptocurrency world lose money, not because they can't trade, but because they are too much like normal people. And trading itself, was never meant for 'normal people'. Human nature in the cryptocurrency world Basically equivalent to handing over heads Think about it carefully, how do most people trade? Only dare to buy after it rises Start cursing the market when it falls Want to cash out after making a little profit Start fantasizing about a rebound after losing a little Isn't it reasonable? Isn't it in line with human nature? Sorry, It is precisely because it is reasonable that you are destined to be part of the harvested. Why do you always enter at the peak? Cut at the floor Because human nature can be summed up in two words: fear of loss + desire to earn.
Trading to the end, it’s not about how much skill you have, but whether you can consistently avoid elementary mistakes. And the vast majority of elementary mistakes, stem from — subjective bias. 1. Stance Bias First comes the conclusion, then the evidence This is the most common and also the deadliest type. You first determine to go long, so the chart is full of support; You first determine to go short, so the highs are all resistance. Indicators have become decoration, structures have become a backdrop. Once the market does not align with your expectations, you do not adjust your strategy, but rather adjust the 'interpretation.' 2. Emotional Bias Emotions dominate decision-making, not signals
$ETH Is this preparing to sell the plate? If you don't go to Beijing, Shanghai, or Guangzhou for work, you will inevitably face difficulties in Ethereum