TIMI this coin, initially just grabbing some, really had no idea what to do. Someone received the airdrop and sold immediately, cashing out $30 and walking away. Now the price has dropped to 25, and they’re still wondering why they didn’t hold on tighter back then.
But honestly, in this kind of market rhythm, choosing to cash out quickly is understandable. Who knows what will happen next? It could break below the floor or rebound and take off. The problem is, we can’t predict it.
Looking at the friends in the group, some have completely sold out, while others are holding on tightly. How much to sell to be profitable? There’s really no clear answer. How did you guys handle it?
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
10 Likes
Reward
10
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
OPsychology
· 20h ago
If I had known earlier that a handshake would be soft, I would have made a profit. There's no use regretting this now.
TIMI's recent move was purely based on luck. Who the hell can predict where the bottom is?
I think selling at $30 was actually smarter, at least I secured the gains.
View OriginalReply0
CryptoTherapist
· 20h ago
ngl this TIMI situation is literally textbook portfolio regret syndrome... that $30 exit? classic trauma response masking as rational exit strategy. now they're watching the chart like it's a therapist's couch lmao
Reply0
DustCollector
· 20h ago
Selling too early leaves you regretful, holding on too long drives you crazy—this is the curse of airdrops.
View OriginalReply0
SchroedingerMiner
· 20h ago
If I had known earlier, I wouldn't have hesitated; just accept it and move on.
TIMI this coin, initially just grabbing some, really had no idea what to do. Someone received the airdrop and sold immediately, cashing out $30 and walking away. Now the price has dropped to 25, and they’re still wondering why they didn’t hold on tighter back then.
But honestly, in this kind of market rhythm, choosing to cash out quickly is understandable. Who knows what will happen next? It could break below the floor or rebound and take off. The problem is, we can’t predict it.
Looking at the friends in the group, some have completely sold out, while others are holding on tightly. How much to sell to be profitable? There’s really no clear answer. How did you guys handle it?