Morning session chasing hot spots, following the leading coins. At noon, a new trend emerges again, grassroots projects suddenly explode in popularity, and the leading effect shifts as quickly as changing tracks. As a result, missing the rhythm, the account suffers losses again.
The most heartbreaking part is that the rotation of leaders is too fast. Yesterday's main character becomes a supporting role today, and the speed of hot spot transfer is simply unstoppable. Can only passively chase the rise, but always one step behind. Market rotation accelerates, and retail investors' reaction time is infinitely compressed.
This is the cost of following the leading coins—frequently changing directions, frequently missing opportunities, and frequently incurring losses. By the time you react, you've already missed the best opportunity. The real challenge is how to find the beat in such a market rhythm.
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LayerZeroJunkie
· 01-13 18:07
Anyway, I can't keep up, so I might as well stop following.
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StableNomad
· 01-12 18:19
ngl this is literally me in may 2021... statistically speaking, chasing rotations like this has a negative expected value. reminds me of UST—think you're early, actually just late. the correlation coefficient between fomo trades and portfolio ruin? pretty much 1.0, not financial advice but
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FlashLoanPrince
· 01-12 05:58
This is what it means to be slapped in the face by the market repeatedly; yesterday's father becomes today's son.
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ChainMelonWatcher
· 01-11 11:22
Chasing the leading stocks really is like cutting leeks; I've been scammed several times too.
To be honest, no matter how fast I react, I can't outpace the manipulators.
This market rotates more frequently than I change clothes. Might as well just lie flat and do nothing.
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AirdropHarvester
· 01-11 09:59
Chasing hot trends frequently is just working for the manipulators; I have given up anyway.
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rugged_again
· 01-11 09:59
Got cut again. This is the consequence of chasing hot topics.
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MerkleDreamer
· 01-11 09:47
Hit the floor again, this is the result of chasing the leading coin.
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StableCoinKaren
· 01-11 09:46
Chasing gains has turned into chasing losses, this is my daily routine.
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GasBankrupter
· 01-11 09:40
Really, chasing the leading stocks until you bleed, is not as good as just lying flat and holding the coins.
Morning session chasing hot spots, following the leading coins. At noon, a new trend emerges again, grassroots projects suddenly explode in popularity, and the leading effect shifts as quickly as changing tracks. As a result, missing the rhythm, the account suffers losses again.
The most heartbreaking part is that the rotation of leaders is too fast. Yesterday's main character becomes a supporting role today, and the speed of hot spot transfer is simply unstoppable. Can only passively chase the rise, but always one step behind. Market rotation accelerates, and retail investors' reaction time is infinitely compressed.
This is the cost of following the leading coins—frequently changing directions, frequently missing opportunities, and frequently incurring losses. By the time you react, you've already missed the best opportunity. The real challenge is how to find the beat in such a market rhythm.