Today I hit a small snag. The fund I just bought gave me a wake-up call, and my account directly turned green by 100 bucks. But I remain calm; after all, I’ve already planned how to play this out.
The day before yesterday, I tried to enter with 5000. The plan is simple and straightforward: add 5000 when it drops 10%, invest 10,000 more if it falls to 20%, and if I really can't hold, and it drops to 30%, I’ll toss in another 10,000. Stop there, with a maximum position of 30,000 — this is the biggest loss threshold I can accept.
As for how to exit? Just do the opposite. If it rises 10%, take some profit; as it goes up, take profits in stages. Finally, when the first position reaches a 10% profit, close everything. This grid strategy, to put it simply, is going against the trend: buy in stages when it falls, sell in stages when it rises.
Isn’t this just volatility? I don’t believe I can’t make a few hotpot dinners out of it.
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0xSleepDeprived
· 1h ago
Grid trading, huh? Sounds pretty solid, just don't let your own plan backfire on you.
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WenAirdrop
· 12-10 10:51
This grid gameplay is a bit ruthless. Dare to go all-in with a cap of 30,000, I really admire your mindset.
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ForkPrince
· 12-10 10:48
Oh no, I'm also trying to figure out this grid trading method, just worried that my speed can't keep up with the market.
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gas_fee_therapist
· 12-10 10:46
Haha, grid players, I have to give a thumbs up to your mindset. You're much better than I was last time I went all-in.
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SilentAlpha
· 12-10 10:45
This grid strategy sounds good, but the real challenge is maintaining the right mindset during execution, especially when it drops to 20%.
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OnchainFortuneTeller
· 12-10 10:30
This grid strategy sounds good, but in practice, your mentality often collapses. Don't just shout slogans, brother.
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TokenomicsDetective
· 12-10 10:25
Ah, grid trading. I've seen this trick many times before; it's always a story of getting trapped again and again.
Today I hit a small snag. The fund I just bought gave me a wake-up call, and my account directly turned green by 100 bucks. But I remain calm; after all, I’ve already planned how to play this out.
The day before yesterday, I tried to enter with 5000. The plan is simple and straightforward: add 5000 when it drops 10%, invest 10,000 more if it falls to 20%, and if I really can't hold, and it drops to 30%, I’ll toss in another 10,000. Stop there, with a maximum position of 30,000 — this is the biggest loss threshold I can accept.
As for how to exit? Just do the opposite. If it rises 10%, take some profit; as it goes up, take profits in stages. Finally, when the first position reaches a 10% profit, close everything. This grid strategy, to put it simply, is going against the trend: buy in stages when it falls, sell in stages when it rises.
Isn’t this just volatility? I don’t believe I can’t make a few hotpot dinners out of it.