This month's trading approach is very simple—strictly execute stop-losses. Those small floating losses of a few dollars or tens of dollars, resolutely do not keep. It sounds easy, but actually doing it is much harder.
The most critical point is to protect the return rate assessment. You must understand that every small loss is pulling down the overall performance. Instead of worrying about one or two failed trades, focus your energy on disciplined risk control.
There's also a detail—how you execute orders is very important. Dealing directly with market depth and counterparties is much more sophisticated than relying on trade matching mechanisms. These seemingly minor differences will gradually become apparent in long-term trading.
Keep going. Controlling risk is the first step to making money.
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AirdropFreedom
· 11h ago
That's right, stop-loss is easy to understand but hard to implement... I've been struggling with it recently.
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ShibaSunglasses
· 11h ago
That's right, stop-loss is really easier to say than to do.
Can't bear to cut a few bucks? Then just wait for hundreds to be gone, I've seen too many people do that.
Market depth is a bit particular; indeed, not all platforms are the same.
Discipline is the key to longevity; everything else is just empty talk.
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OnchainGossiper
· 11h ago
That's true, but the number of people who can actually execute stop-loss is very few. Most of the time, it's just reluctance to accept that small unrealized loss, and in the end, they reverse and give back all the profits.
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AirdropLicker
· 11h ago
Honestly, stop-loss is easy to talk about, but executing it is really damn hard.
It's still the same old story: control your hand and don't be greedy. Small losses accumulate and are the real killer.
I believe in deep execution; the difference in details can indeed be seen over the long term.
This month's trading approach is very simple—strictly execute stop-losses. Those small floating losses of a few dollars or tens of dollars, resolutely do not keep. It sounds easy, but actually doing it is much harder.
The most critical point is to protect the return rate assessment. You must understand that every small loss is pulling down the overall performance. Instead of worrying about one or two failed trades, focus your energy on disciplined risk control.
There's also a detail—how you execute orders is very important. Dealing directly with market depth and counterparties is much more sophisticated than relying on trade matching mechanisms. These seemingly minor differences will gradually become apparent in long-term trading.
Keep going. Controlling risk is the first step to making money.