Trading, many people naturally respond to market changes. Actually, there's a trick—find the unchanging things.



Before the market opens, what can you refer to? The recent trend directions, the high and low points of the current candlestick—these are all in front of you. Once the opening price is out, you have an additional fixed reference. These seemingly simple things are your "anchor points."

No matter how the market fluctuates, having these fixed references allows you to respond to all changes with stability. Many beginners are always led by the market trends, but it's actually because they haven't established their own reference system. Once you use confirmed data like candlesticks and opening prices as pivot points, your mindset becomes much more stable. No need to guess—let the data speak.
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DoomCanistervip
· 01-07 03:50
That's right, but you need to have your own trading framework and not be played around by the market.
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ForumMiningMastervip
· 01-07 03:37
That's right, you need to have your own anchor point and not follow the crowd blindly guessing. Let's talk about another one—beginners are most likely to make the mistake of being scared by a few green lines. The opening price and yesterday's high and low are really essential references; I mostly rely on this set now. Still the same advice: no matter how many market variables there are, as long as you're aware of them, you won't panic. Those who are always thinking about making quick money are usually the ones who get cut by the market.
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ShadowStakervip
· 01-07 03:32
anchor points sound nice on paper but let's be real—most retail traders panic-sell the moment their data-driven thesis gets liquidated. the irony is thick here ngl
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tokenomics_truthervip
· 01-07 03:27
That's right, but very few people can truly stick to using data and avoid guessing blindly. ``` I like the concept of anchoring; many people know about it but can't do it. When a wave of volatility comes, their mentality collapses. ``` ``` The opening price and the trend of the past few days are really free information; it's such a pity to waste it. ``` ``` The biggest problem for beginners is not technology but lacking their own system, trusting every piece of news. ``` ``` Responding to everything with "unchanging principles" sounds simple, but how many stop-losses must one go through to realize it? ``` ``` I think the key is mentality. Having an anchor point is just the first step; the real challenge is not being torn apart by FOMO. ``` ``` Data will speak, but only if you can understand it; otherwise, no matter how much data there is, it's useless. ``` ``` I deeply relate to this. Going back to basics like candlestick charts and opening prices is actually the most stable approach. ``` ``` Building your own reference system sounds easy, but how many losses does it take to fully trust it? ``` ``` Saying "no guessing" is easy, but if the market really drops ten percent, see if you can hold your nerve. ```
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