An interesting phenomenon worth pondering: among the frequently operated trading addresses, nine out of ten haven't outperformed a simple buy-and-hold strategy. The data is right there, but many people still refuse to believe it.
Altura's epoch mechanism is quite similar to this principle. You can't rush a process—just like the slow food movement in Italy emphasizes, yeast needs time to ferment, wine needs time to age, and patient capital cannot deliver instant results. The problem is most people can't wait.
The real logic of making money is actually counterintuitive: slow often is the fastest way. Once you learn this, the entire game changes.
View Original
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.
18 Likes
Reward
18
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ColdWalletGuardian
· 1h ago
My goodness, this is why 90% of traders end up losing money. Really, stop messing around blindly.
Buying and holding is so simple, yet people have to watch the charts all day, exhausting themselves, and in the end, they can't even outperform.
The Altura example is good; indeed, you need to let the bullets fly for a while. Rushing is not the way.
The principle of "slow is fast" has been heard a hundred times, but few truly believe it.
View OriginalReply0
alpha_leaker
· 6h ago
This data is right here, yet nine out of ten people are still deluding themselves with frequent trading.
The slow food theory is indeed perfect for the crypto world, but the problem is that no one can really resist not trading, right?
View OriginalReply0
SwapWhisperer
· 01-09 11:54
People who lie back and win never make a sound; the group that calls signals every day has long been wiped out.
View OriginalReply0
pumpamentalist
· 01-09 11:54
The group of people who operate frequently are just digging their own graves. Sticking to the data and still messing around, I really don't understand.
The saying "slow and steady wins the race" has become tiresome, but it is indeed the truth... The problem is, who the hell can withstand that long waiting period?
Altura's system feels like it's teaching people to quit that addictive quick gratification trading. There's something there.
View OriginalReply0
AltcoinTherapist
· 01-09 11:36
Uh, I've heard this many times before, but I haven't seen anyone truly able to buy and just leave it alone.
View OriginalReply0
ArbitrageBot
· 01-09 11:33
That's very true. I've long noticed that those who watch the market every day make the least money, while the group of guys who just bury themselves in it and don't look back end up laughing last.
View OriginalReply0
GweiWatcher
· 01-09 11:27
I just love to see this kind of heartbreaking data: 90% of people are still day and night trading, but an account that hasn't moved in half a year outperforms them all.
An interesting phenomenon worth pondering: among the frequently operated trading addresses, nine out of ten haven't outperformed a simple buy-and-hold strategy. The data is right there, but many people still refuse to believe it.
Altura's epoch mechanism is quite similar to this principle. You can't rush a process—just like the slow food movement in Italy emphasizes, yeast needs time to ferment, wine needs time to age, and patient capital cannot deliver instant results. The problem is most people can't wait.
The real logic of making money is actually counterintuitive: slow often is the fastest way. Once you learn this, the entire game changes.