Observing that RIVER's recent funding rate has been consistently positive, which often indicates overly bullish sentiment and weak willingness from the market makers to push prices higher. Based on this judgment, a layered hedging approach can be considered: divide the principal into three parts, allocated in ratios of 2.5, 2.5, and 5. The first and second parts establish short positions at different price levels, while the third part retains flexible funds. The advantage of this approach is that even if a stop-loss is triggered, the overall risk remains within controllable limits.



The market cap ceiling for RIVER is approximately around 2 billion. Greed is often the biggest pitfall in trading; don't expect to double your investment with a single shot. Progressively taking profits step by step will significantly reduce risk. This method is suitable for traders with some experience as a reference, but ultimately, it should be adjusted according to your own risk tolerance.
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GamefiHarvestervip
· 14h ago
The rate remains positive, and the bulls are indeed a bit excited. This wave presents a good opportunity for the bears.
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BearWhisperGodvip
· 18h ago
The fact that the funding rate remains positive does warrant caution, but to be honest, the layered hedging approach still depends on the specific market conditions; it's not always effective.
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Degen4Breakfastvip
· 22h ago
The fee rate remains positive, and the bullish sentiment is indeed a bit excessive. The logic makes sense.
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ser_aped.ethvip
· 01-10 17:31
If the funding rate remains consistently positive, should I just go short? I think this logic also depends on RIVER's fundamentals; looking at the rate alone can easily lead to pitfalls.
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ContractHuntervip
· 01-10 14:02
The continuous positive rate signal has caught my attention early. The bulls are too excited, which is indeed dangerous. However, layered hedging is easier to talk about than to execute; the mental state is the biggest test.
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gas_guzzlervip
· 01-10 13:59
As long as the fee rate remains positive, you want to buy the dip? Buddy, your logic is reversed. Layered hedging sounds good, but when it comes to smashing through stop-loss levels, your mentality will still explode. 2 billion ceiling? I feel like this coin isn't that simple. Going all-in in one shot is indeed foolish, but gradual progress also needs market conditions to cooperate. Everything you said is correct, but when it comes to execution, you forget everything.
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NotGonnaMakeItvip
· 01-10 13:59
The fact that the rate remains positive has caught my attention early on. When the bulls are too excited, it's indeed time to be cautious. Layered hedging is a good strategy, but executing it tests your mentality, especially when you see your account floating in loss. Is the 2 billion ceiling a bit conservative? Or am I too optimistic? Every time I tell myself not to go all-in in a single shot, but I still can't resist. That's why I'm forever broke. Proportional allocation is indeed stable, but the real challenge is not to get tempted.
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AirdropAutomatonvip
· 01-10 13:55
As long as the fee rate remains positive, you want to buy the dip? Bro, you need to watch out for the whales. --- Layered hedging sounds good, but when it comes to dumping, everyone has to kneel. --- 2 billion cap? I think it's doubtful; this coin is a bit too niche. --- The dream of going all-in and doubling up should have woken you up by now. Isn't steady returns more appealing? --- Keep your flexible funds well reserved; going all-in at once is not the truth. --- Positive fee rates ≠ buy-the-dip signals. Can this logic be more cautious? --- A 3.5 ratio allocation sounds professional, but actual operation still depends on market conditions.
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OnlyOnMainnetvip
· 01-10 13:48
As long as the fee rate remains positive, people think about shorting. I've seen this logic too many times, and in the end, it's always the opposite side that gets knocked out.
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HodlAndChillvip
· 01-10 13:43
Bullish sentiment overheating is indeed something to watch out for; the layered hedging approach is quite good. The fee rate remains positive, so watch out for the manipulator's tricks. Going all-in is really a big taboo in trading, good point. You should be aware of the RIVER ceiling; don't be greedy. Steady profits are the way to go; there's no need to rush.
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