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$BEAT Short Position Strategy Review: A successful two-day profit-taking cycle. The trading logic this time was actually very clear. Entered short at around 1.9, and the entire downward structure unfolded as expected, with the direction correct and the rhythm on point.
What’s most interesting in trading is the handling of details. Yesterday, I suggested exiting at 1.28, but some followers hesitated and didn’t exit. Today, I provided a second exit opportunity around 1.38 — the final profit was indeed slightly less than the optimal plan. But honestly, just ten minutes after exiting, the market plunged again, and at that moment I was glad I had exited early.
This is the principle I’ve always emphasized: the market doesn’t have an absolutely perfect exit point. Being able to preserve profits amid volatility and avoiding a crash at the peak already surpasses most traders’ skill levels. Staying alive, maintaining stable profits, and keeping flexibility are always more valuable than chasing that last bit of gain. The crypto market moves fast, and knowing when to fully retreat is actually the highest form of trading wisdom.
Not chasing that last bit, and instead avoiding the dump ten minutes later, has a bit of a clever trick to it.
But to be honest, taking profits in time is really much more comfortable than chasing that last jump for profit. Staying alive is the real winner.
If you really do it perfectly, making a small profit isn't called trading, it's called cheating.
Being alive is the most important thing; everything else is虚的.
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It should have been sold at 1.28; greed for that small difference almost caused a crash. Suspense.
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This guy is right. Not blowing up the position already puts you ahead of more than half of the people, honestly.
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Getting out intact is real skill, much more reliable than those who talk about precise bottom-fishing every day.
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Make money in two days and then exit—that's the logic of survival. Simple, straightforward, and very effective.
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Not crashing > pursuing maximum profit; many people have reversed this order.