Some time ago, I followed the research and earned quite a bit of profit. The threefold return made me decide to take profits and secure my gains. To be honest, the day before yesterday I actually had the chance to double my investment again, but I couldn't resist and sold—it's a bit regrettable, but I only realized later that this decision saved me.
Looking back at the coins I chose, the core logic still holds up. My judgment of their fundamentals is sound, and I still hold two of them in my account, waiting either for them to go to zero completely or for a few times increase in value before making a move.
This time, I finally understood a principle: sometimes, knowing you can't hold on anymore, it's better to set a target and let go rather than frequently trading in and out. Once sold, I stop watching. Anyway, no matter how much I trade, I can't change the market cycle. Instead of stressing over short-term fluctuations, it's better to trust your own judgment.
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AlphaBrain
· 01-11 15:54
Tripling your position is a bit conservative, but indeed, just staying alive makes you a winner.
Honestly, this move saved your life; you'll understand when the market crashes later.
If you can't hold, don't force it. That's true insight.
Holding two coins is probably aiming for an extreme market, I can't understand this logic, but some people have definitely made money from it.
Frequent trading is just working for the exchange; your awareness is not too late.
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If you've made money, you should exit. Don't be greedy for that last doubling; it's often that last doubling that ruins people.
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Once you exit, don't watch the market anymore. Really, watching the market is the easiest way to regret.
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If the fundamentals are solid and you're still holding two coins, is that confidence in your judgment or gambling psychology?
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That's the difference between retail investors and professionals: knowing when to stop.
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Set your goal and then leave. It's easy to say but hard to do. I always think this way, but end up caught at the top.
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PseudoIntellectual
· 01-11 15:53
Running after 3x returns is easy to say, but mental resilience is the hardest part.
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NFTRegretful
· 01-11 15:52
It ran away with 3x, this mental toughness is incredible. I need to learn from it.
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CodeZeroBasis
· 01-11 15:49
3x returns and you run, and still say "saved me"? Haha, this mindset is really something.
Securing profits is fine, but I can feel the regret of "missing out on doubling."
Holding two coins for extreme situations... Are you gambling or investing? Honestly, I don't quite understand.
Setting a target and letting go is easy to say, but when the market takes off, who can really hold back?
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MevHunter
· 01-11 15:40
Secure your gains with triple returns, not a bad mindset. But to be honest, you're just lucky; if the market hadn't turned around to save you, your mindset would be blown up right now.
Some time ago, I followed the research and earned quite a bit of profit. The threefold return made me decide to take profits and secure my gains. To be honest, the day before yesterday I actually had the chance to double my investment again, but I couldn't resist and sold—it's a bit regrettable, but I only realized later that this decision saved me.
Looking back at the coins I chose, the core logic still holds up. My judgment of their fundamentals is sound, and I still hold two of them in my account, waiting either for them to go to zero completely or for a few times increase in value before making a move.
This time, I finally understood a principle: sometimes, knowing you can't hold on anymore, it's better to set a target and let go rather than frequently trading in and out. Once sold, I stop watching. Anyway, no matter how much I trade, I can't change the market cycle. Instead of stressing over short-term fluctuations, it's better to trust your own judgment.