#以太坊大户持仓变化 I've developed an "anti-human nature" habit after years of trading: the more hot money flows into a coin, the more I step back; conversely, for those niche targets that are completely overlooked, I keep a close eye on them.
While others chase rallying hot coins and rush in, what am I doing? I'm watching those completely abandoned by the market — coins that neither rise nor fall, with K-line charts as flat as an EKG. Many call these "dead coins," but for me they're priority targets.
Why? Because the real danger isn't when prices fall, but when everyone's attention is focused in one place. And the most valuable opportunities hide in those dark corners where nobody cares or discusses.
I never try to predict when a pump will happen, never daydream about "it's going to 10x." I do one thing: observe, wait for it to show "signs of movement," and then I'm already squatting below waiting.
Once I enter, the logic becomes simple: strictly maintain my stop loss, write the target price in stone, and don't think about anything else. No adding positions, no averaging down, no frequent day trading. When it reaches the exit level, I turn and leave without romanticizing the market.
Many think this approach is too slow. But when they're constantly switching coins, chasing trends, placing ten+ orders daily, I'm often sitting at one position waiting — waiting three weeks, waiting a month, doing nothing. What's interesting is that the money I make most often comes quietly during those periods when I'm doing absolutely nothing.
For me, trading is exactly like farming. Plants don't grow faster by watering daily; they need dormancy seasons, and when you need to wait, every second counts.
The rules I set for myself are rigid: the moment it reaches the target price, I leave immediately, not waiting even a cent less. By year's end, my returns are more stable than before, and my account grows faster.
Many now ask how I pinpoint "it's about to move," and the method isn't hard — the problem is most people can't do it because that moment of judgment happens during the most agonizing, frustrating days when you want to smash everything. Once you truly withstand that boring period, you'll naturally understand my logic.
#以太坊大户持仓变化 I've developed an "anti-human nature" habit after years of trading: the more hot money flows into a coin, the more I step back; conversely, for those niche targets that are completely overlooked, I keep a close eye on them.
While others chase rallying hot coins and rush in, what am I doing? I'm watching those completely abandoned by the market — coins that neither rise nor fall, with K-line charts as flat as an EKG. Many call these "dead coins," but for me they're priority targets.
Why? Because the real danger isn't when prices fall, but when everyone's attention is focused in one place. And the most valuable opportunities hide in those dark corners where nobody cares or discusses.
I never try to predict when a pump will happen, never daydream about "it's going to 10x." I do one thing: observe, wait for it to show "signs of movement," and then I'm already squatting below waiting.
Once I enter, the logic becomes simple: strictly maintain my stop loss, write the target price in stone, and don't think about anything else. No adding positions, no averaging down, no frequent day trading. When it reaches the exit level, I turn and leave without romanticizing the market.
Many think this approach is too slow. But when they're constantly switching coins, chasing trends, placing ten+ orders daily, I'm often sitting at one position waiting — waiting three weeks, waiting a month, doing nothing. What's interesting is that the money I make most often comes quietly during those periods when I'm doing absolutely nothing.
For me, trading is exactly like farming. Plants don't grow faster by watering daily; they need dormancy seasons, and when you need to wait, every second counts.
The rules I set for myself are rigid: the moment it reaches the target price, I leave immediately, not waiting even a cent less. By year's end, my returns are more stable than before, and my account grows faster.
Many now ask how I pinpoint "it's about to move," and the method isn't hard — the problem is most people can't do it because that moment of judgment happens during the most agonizing, frustrating days when you want to smash everything. Once you truly withstand that boring period, you'll naturally understand my logic.