BTC currently maintains a long position strategy. During entry, slippage was indeed encountered, and a front-run trade took precedence, ultimately forcing a $200 add-on at a high level, but overall the bullish layout remains intact.
The trading plan is divided into two layers: first, setting up a hedge short position as a risk management tool, which can be activated if the market pulls back; second, retaining the original swing long strategy as a backup, which will be reactivated if BTC breaks through a key resistance level. The original long-term bullish swing strategy will restart.
This combined approach both preserves participation in the upside and provides protection in case of a market reversal. The key is to closely monitor BTC's key support and resistance levels.
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MetaNomad
· 01-07 16:44
Adding to a high position with 200 is really brave, I need to learn this mindset.
Slippage being targeted is too common, the key is how to stop the bleeding afterward. This hedge + swing trading combination is quite stable.
Let's wait until BTC drops again, for now just endure.
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PhantomHunter
· 01-07 16:41
Adding $200 at a high position, this mindset is really strong
Once you've been affected by MEV, you'll understand. Now I've learned to be smarter
Hedging + swing trading double insurance, playing this way is indeed more stable
Let's wait until the key level is broken, now just waiting
Slippage has too much impact, can't avoid it every time, so annoying
The strategy is good, just depends on whether it breaks the resistance later
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AlgoAlchemist
· 01-07 16:40
Adding 200 dollars at a high position? This counter-move is a bit aggressive, just betting that BTC can break through.
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JustAnotherWallet
· 01-07 16:39
Adding 200 dollars at a high position hurts a bit, was it sniped by MEV? But this hedging strategy is indeed solid; being prepared on both sides gives the feeling of bottom fishing.
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LiquidationOracle
· 01-07 16:21
Adding $200 at a high position is a bit painful, but hedging the short position is indeed stable.
Being exploited by front-running trades—that's the cost of being on the chain.
Confident about the upcoming breakout; the key levels must be watched closely.
The overall logic is good, but I'm worried about a flash crash during the night.
This kind of two-way strategy feels like insurance, but the premium isn't cheap.
BTC currently maintains a long position strategy. During entry, slippage was indeed encountered, and a front-run trade took precedence, ultimately forcing a $200 add-on at a high level, but overall the bullish layout remains intact.
The trading plan is divided into two layers: first, setting up a hedge short position as a risk management tool, which can be activated if the market pulls back; second, retaining the original swing long strategy as a backup, which will be reactivated if BTC breaks through a key resistance level. The original long-term bullish swing strategy will restart.
This combined approach both preserves participation in the upside and provides protection in case of a market reversal. The key is to closely monitor BTC's key support and resistance levels.