Actually, everyone understands that when liquidity dries up, the so-called “bottom fishing” is often just a way of giving yourself something to do. A couple of days ago, I went back through my old backtest notes—what was most useful wasn’t which indicator was more accurate, but that line: “Don’t die in volatility.” Don’t stubbornly hold your position; don’t max out your margin; if you can, take it in batches—save a bit of firepower and patience.



Lately, there’s been more noise about social mining and fan tokens—the idea that “attention is mining.” I’ll take a look too, but honestly, attention isn’t the same as liquidity. When things are lively, it looks great; when things cool down, all you’re left with is slippage and the awkwardness of having no counterparty. Anyway, what I care about more right now is: if the market pulls another waterline back, can my strategy still survive until the next round? That’s it for now.
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