$AKT trend observation: Strategy adjustment is more important than blind trading
Recently I've been looking at the nature of trading and suddenly realized—good traders and good artists actually have something in common. It's not about a complete makeover overnight, but rather maintaining the core logic while flexibly adjusting execution methods based on environmental changes.
Take trend following for example, the core of "going with the trend" never changes, but how do you do it? What tools do you use to sense market rhythm? That requires continuous iteration. Sometimes it's moving averages, sometimes it's trading volume, sometimes it's capital sentiment indicators—essentially innovating your "orchestration" based on different era backgrounds.
There's another eye-opening point: don't get stuck on a single loss. Just like one unsuccessful work doesn't mean career failure, gains and losses from a single trade aren't that critical. What really matters is the curve over large cycles—quarterly and annual comprehensive performance is the hard metric. Too many people get caught up in today's $50 loss and end up with a mental breakdown.
**Regarding AKT's current stance**
It seems to be primarily observational. The reasons are simple: - The 4-hour chart does show strong RSI, but looking at the 1-hour, trading volume has dropped over 50%, which is a weird signal - Price is stuck at 0.51 USDT, having just experienced a 24-hour surge and now needs time to confirm whether it can hold above the previous 0.53 high - If I really need to act, two conditions must appear simultaneously: price breaks 0.53 on volume, while 1-hour RSI hasn't exceeded 75 - The inverse conditions are also clear: dropping below 0.48 suggests the trend may reverse, no need to force it
After experiencing consecutive losses, the current phase is about learning to wait. When it's time to hold back, hold back. Sometimes the best trading decision is "not to trade"—just like refining a work, not every stage requires releasing something new; sometimes observing from the sidelines is actually more mature.
$AKT trend observation: Strategy adjustment is more important than blind trading
Recently I've been looking at the nature of trading and suddenly realized—good traders and good artists actually have something in common. It's not about a complete makeover overnight, but rather maintaining the core logic while flexibly adjusting execution methods based on environmental changes.
Take trend following for example, the core of "going with the trend" never changes, but how do you do it? What tools do you use to sense market rhythm? That requires continuous iteration. Sometimes it's moving averages, sometimes it's trading volume, sometimes it's capital sentiment indicators—essentially innovating your "orchestration" based on different era backgrounds.
There's another eye-opening point: don't get stuck on a single loss. Just like one unsuccessful work doesn't mean career failure, gains and losses from a single trade aren't that critical. What really matters is the curve over large cycles—quarterly and annual comprehensive performance is the hard metric. Too many people get caught up in today's $50 loss and end up with a mental breakdown.
**Regarding AKT's current stance**
It seems to be primarily observational. The reasons are simple:
- The 4-hour chart does show strong RSI, but looking at the 1-hour, trading volume has dropped over 50%, which is a weird signal
- Price is stuck at 0.51 USDT, having just experienced a 24-hour surge and now needs time to confirm whether it can hold above the previous 0.53 high
- If I really need to act, two conditions must appear simultaneously: price breaks 0.53 on volume, while 1-hour RSI hasn't exceeded 75
- The inverse conditions are also clear: dropping below 0.48 suggests the trend may reverse, no need to force it
After experiencing consecutive losses, the current phase is about learning to wait. When it's time to hold back, hold back. Sometimes the best trading decision is "not to trade"—just like refining a work, not every stage requires releasing something new; sometimes observing from the sidelines is actually more mature.