For those who missed the previous 2111-2113, 2098-2103 multi-position opportunities,


ETH steady follow-up strategy:

• Wait for a pullback after breaking through 2190, enter steadily from the right side
• Or monitor the core zones of 2065-2068, 2080-2083
Only trade high win-rate opportunities, don't chase rallies or panic sell, maintain proper risk-reward ratio.

Why does small capital always wither first in the market?
With the same 20,000 starting capital, your outcome versus others never comes down to the numbers in your principal.
The answer lies in the scale of patience.

Those holding massive capital don't rush to extract from the market. They wait for a trend wave where a 10% fluctuation becomes a generous gift, enough to move with ease.
You're clutching modest capital—even if you double it, it won't fill life's gaps. So you keep shuttling through volatility, grasping at every seemingly opportune moment, eventually exhausted.
What destroys you is never the market's turmoil, but the pressure of survival and anxiety to get rich quick.

You think trading should be like a 9-to-5 job, with daily gains for stability.
But true traders operate on "waiting for the wind, striking once and deciding."
When trends come, go all-in; when the market retreats, stay in cash and wait.
A wise person conceals their tools and acts when the time is right.

I rarely give specific price levels as reference
because most of the time I'm waiting.
But when that high win-rate critical level finally appears,
the first time it comes is a gift from heaven; the second time might already be a trap.
Those who enter decisively have already been gradually reducing positions as the trend runs, even exiting to await the next opportunity.
Key opportunities only come once. Miss it and chase rallies or panic sell—your risk-reward is already imbalanced, leaving only passive struggle.
#Gate13周年全球庆典
ETH1,7%
View Original
post-image
post-image
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.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pin