In the crypto market, I've been involved for many years, seen many people come in, and also watched quite a few leave in disappointment. The most heartbreaking part is that their reasons for failure are often the same—using the wrong strategies. Today, I want to share some real market principles and trading insights.



**Small capital, avoid "all-in" bets**

I've seen too many people with just a few thousand or ten thousand dollars trying to go all-in for a quick turnaround, only to be wiped out by a single correction. This mindset is the most dangerous. The game rules for small funds are not about "making quick money," but about surviving until the next bull market. Think about it—there are only one or two opportunities a year that can truly change your fate; the rest of the time, the market is garbage. Instead of trading frequently and constantly stopping out, it's better to practice on a demo account and wait for a high-confidence main rally before taking action. The success rate of this approach can be ten times higher or more.

**Cognition gap is a protective charm; demo trading is your training ground**

There's a saying: "Money earned by luck is ultimately lost by skill." This is not a joke; it's a painful lesson. If you can't achieve stable profits on a demo account, then real trading is just giving away money. Many people misunderstand demo trading, thinking it's a game of predicting rises and falls. Wrong. The real purpose of demo trading is to train your mindset—like when the coin price crashes, do you dare to buy the dip? When the price surges to a critical level, are you willing to take profits and exit? These seemingly simple decisions require thousands of repetitions to internalize the ability to act instinctively. Without honing on a demo, all your real trades are based on instinct, which is often wildly wrong.

**When good news is exhausted, it's a sign of a top; learn to exit early**

There's an interesting phenomenon in the crypto market: on the day a project announces a major positive development, if the price doesn't surge, then the next day’s gap-up is usually a trap. Why? Because smart money has already positioned itself in advance, waiting for the good news to land before selling off. The market always trades on expectations, not facts. So retail investors who only jump in when the news is everywhere tend to become the bagholders. Remember this: exiting before everyone sees the good news is always faster than reacting after it hits.

**Holiday curse really exists**

Especially before long holidays in China, the crypto market is likely to dip. This is no coincidence. The reason is straightforward: large funds, to avoid the uncertainties during the holiday, will reduce their positions in advance. When big money reduces holdings, market sentiment starts to loosen, and retail investors still hold on, eventually becoming victims of the stampede. My trading habit is: before the holiday, reduce my positions to below 30%, even if I miss a rally, I prefer to preserve strength. After the holiday, once the trend is clearer, I gradually re-enter based on the situation. This may not maximize profits, but it ensures the safest survival.

**Mid-to-long-term doesn't mean buy and do nothing**

Many people have a big misunderstanding about "mid-to-long-term" investing, thinking it means buying coins and holding without any action, waiting for double. This is a huge misconception. True mid-to-long-term strategy involves continuously optimizing your position and risk during the holding period. For example, during a sharp decline, buy the dip in stages to lower the average cost; at key resistance levels, reduce holdings to lock in profits; during the main rally, gradually add positions to expand gains. This is the essence of mid-to-long-term investing—not passive waiting, but active management.
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ShibaSunglassesvip
· 4h ago
Has everyone gone into the roulette... Indeed, it's time to reflect Practicing on a demo account is essential; trading with real money is just giving away money. I've heard this countless times, yet some still don't believe it The night before a long holiday always requires a cautious step; it's a market law The biggest test for medium to long-term strategies is still mentality; frankly, you have to endure When good news is exhausted and the top is in sight, I saw it coming long ago, but retail investors always find out last Steady as the main focus, don't expect to get rich overnight; living to the next round is the real winner There's nothing wrong with what this article says, but I'm just worried some people will still go all in after reading it Demo trading is truly a mirror that reveals your true self; how many people reveal their true colors as soon as they go live I used the tactic of reducing positions before the holiday; I didn't actually lose, but I always felt I missed an opportunity
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BearMarketGardenervip
· 4h ago
Exactly right, we just have to make it to the next bull market.
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BearMarketSurvivorvip
· 4h ago
Practice accounts are not practicing well; going live is just giving away money. This sentence really hits home. --- Playing with a small principal in a dart game is like betting your life. --- I've seen too many instances where good news causes a dump; smart money has already run away. --- I've also used the tactic of reducing positions before holidays; staying alive is more important than making quick money. --- Adding to positions, reducing positions, locking in profits—mid- to long-term strategies are actually more mentally demanding than short-term ones. --- I've seen too many people make money through luck, only to lose it all in the end—one word—tragic. --- Poor cognition is truly a protective charm; a slight gap in understanding means facing an opponent from a different dimension. --- The majority of the market is garbage; we only wait for one or two certainty opportunities a year. During other times, don’t bother. --- High open trap situations—if you haven't been caught a few times, you can't honestly say you've traded crypto. --- The essence of a practice account is to train your mindset, not a prediction game. Many people get this backwards.
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