This trade was executed quite smoothly. Based on the account data, the daily growth was 7.66%, which is already a relatively stable curve for a spot position.
Let's talk about the entire process; it's not very complicated:
I kept an eye on the BEATS token. When it adjusted to the 0.84 price level, I felt an opportunity was coming, so I opened the first long position. It then rebounded nicely, rising to around 1.25. I thought this wave had played out, so I decisively took profit and closed the position. That was the first phase.
Not long after, it fell back to 0.97. I judged that this trend wasn't over yet, so I entered again to go long. The second wave was even more aggressive, directly surging to around 2.0. At this point, market sentiment was indeed a bit overheated, so I chose to take profit again.
After continuous rises, risk started to accumulate. I opened a small short position at 1.99, trying to test the waters. By the next evening, the price indeed retraced to around 1.14, and this hedge position also brought me some gains.
Through several operations, the account achieved steady daily growth. The core message I want to convey is: on such volatile coins, precise swing trading and strict take-profit discipline are much more realistic than fantasizing about holding onto a hundredfold coin.
Of course, this kind of approach requires a high level of discipline. You need to have a keen sense of market sentiment, a clear understanding of key price levels, and the ability to execute your trading plan decisively—when you say go, you go; no dragging your feet. Although I had a good result this time, I am also constantly facing the risk of misjudgment and drawdowns.
So if you're also paying attention to these kinds of opportunities, my advice is these few points: only use money you can afford to lose to try, set your stop-loss and take-profit plans in advance, don’t be greedy after making profits, and don’t panic when losing. Only then can your account gradually accumulate.
Market opportunities are always there, but the premise is that you are still in the game.
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tokenomics_truther
· 13h ago
Profit-taking discipline is indeed the key; many people get caught up in greed and fail.
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AirdropAnxiety
· 13h ago
Yes, this move is indeed stable, and the take-profit discipline is strict.
You're right, swing trading is much more reliable than the Mengbai Hundred Coins.
View OriginalReply0
LightningWallet
· 14h ago
This move definitely has some substance; discipline in taking profits is truly the core.
This trade was executed quite smoothly. Based on the account data, the daily growth was 7.66%, which is already a relatively stable curve for a spot position.
Let's talk about the entire process; it's not very complicated:
I kept an eye on the BEATS token. When it adjusted to the 0.84 price level, I felt an opportunity was coming, so I opened the first long position. It then rebounded nicely, rising to around 1.25. I thought this wave had played out, so I decisively took profit and closed the position. That was the first phase.
Not long after, it fell back to 0.97. I judged that this trend wasn't over yet, so I entered again to go long. The second wave was even more aggressive, directly surging to around 2.0. At this point, market sentiment was indeed a bit overheated, so I chose to take profit again.
After continuous rises, risk started to accumulate. I opened a small short position at 1.99, trying to test the waters. By the next evening, the price indeed retraced to around 1.14, and this hedge position also brought me some gains.
Through several operations, the account achieved steady daily growth. The core message I want to convey is: on such volatile coins, precise swing trading and strict take-profit discipline are much more realistic than fantasizing about holding onto a hundredfold coin.
Of course, this kind of approach requires a high level of discipline. You need to have a keen sense of market sentiment, a clear understanding of key price levels, and the ability to execute your trading plan decisively—when you say go, you go; no dragging your feet. Although I had a good result this time, I am also constantly facing the risk of misjudgment and drawdowns.
So if you're also paying attention to these kinds of opportunities, my advice is these few points: only use money you can afford to lose to try, set your stop-loss and take-profit plans in advance, don’t be greedy after making profits, and don’t panic when losing. Only then can your account gradually accumulate.
Market opportunities are always there, but the premise is that you are still in the game.