Recent market volatility has caused many friends to be trapped in their holdings. Today, I’ll share several practical refill methods, all tested with real money.
**Inverse Pyramid DCA Method** This tactic is best suited for beginners. The logic is simple— the lower the price, the more you buy. For example: When a certain token is at $12, you buy 500 units. When it drops to $10.5 (a 12.5% decrease), you add 1000 units. Then, if it falls again to $9 (another 14% drop), you buy 1500 units. This way, your low-cost positions dominate, and your average cost drops rapidly.
But there are two prerequisites: first, you need sufficient backup funds; second, keep a calm mindset—don’t panic when prices continue to fall.
**Tiered Fixed-Point Refill Method** If your capital isn’t large, this method is more practical.
Don’t rush to buy more at every small dip, or your bullets will run out quickly. For example, if you bought at $15, set two pre-determined refill points: $12 (a 20% drop) and $9.5 (another 21% decrease), and buy the same amount each time. This approach helps lower your average cost with each purchase without wasting money.
**Intraday High Sell Low Buy Strategy** If you can monitor the market, try this.
Suppose you hold 800 units at a cost of $8. One morning, the price drops to $6.8; immediately buy another 800 units. When it rebounds to $7.5, sell the original 800 units. You still hold 800 units, but your average cost drops to $7.5, reducing your loss for the day.
Remember two things: don’t reverse the operation sequence, and don’t be greedy waiting for higher prices.
**Grid Loop Arbitrage Method** Lacking extra funds? Use this one.
For example, if a $5 altcoin is oscillating between $4 and $6, split your position into three parts: buy one part when it drops to $4, sell one part when it rises to $4.7; buy again at $4.3, sell at $5.3. Gradually profit from the spread, lowering your average cost without adding extra money.
**A Few Heartfelt Words at the End:** First, limit refill attempts to three times; don’t keep adding until you become a project shareholder. Second, don’t allocate more than 30% of your total funds to a single coin; diversification is crucial. Third, always check the latest project updates before refilling—if the team runs away or tokens get unlocked and dumped, cut losses and exit immediately. Replenishing in such cases is just throwing money into a pit.
No coin market ever rises forever, but scientific position management makes a difference.
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GasFeeCrying
· 12-13 02:59
Sounds good, but I still prefer to buy the dip directly, no need to make it so complicated.
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GateUser-9f682d4c
· 12-11 11:51
Playing the inverted pyramid sounds cool, but the actual execution can be mentally overwhelming.
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tokenomics_truther
· 12-11 11:35
No matter how nicely you put it, that's all there is to it; the key is still having bullets.
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GateUser-afe07a92
· 12-11 11:31
Hmm, the grid method is indeed good, but you need to be patient.
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ImaginaryWhale
· 12-11 11:25
Just need to top up three times, don't create a project team.
High-Quality Coin Refill Strategies After a Crash
Recent market volatility has caused many friends to be trapped in their holdings. Today, I’ll share several practical refill methods, all tested with real money.
**Inverse Pyramid DCA Method**
This tactic is best suited for beginners. The logic is simple— the lower the price, the more you buy.
For example: When a certain token is at $12, you buy 500 units. When it drops to $10.5 (a 12.5% decrease), you add 1000 units. Then, if it falls again to $9 (another 14% drop), you buy 1500 units. This way, your low-cost positions dominate, and your average cost drops rapidly.
But there are two prerequisites: first, you need sufficient backup funds; second, keep a calm mindset—don’t panic when prices continue to fall.
**Tiered Fixed-Point Refill Method**
If your capital isn’t large, this method is more practical.
Don’t rush to buy more at every small dip, or your bullets will run out quickly. For example, if you bought at $15, set two pre-determined refill points: $12 (a 20% drop) and $9.5 (another 21% decrease), and buy the same amount each time. This approach helps lower your average cost with each purchase without wasting money.
**Intraday High Sell Low Buy Strategy**
If you can monitor the market, try this.
Suppose you hold 800 units at a cost of $8. One morning, the price drops to $6.8; immediately buy another 800 units. When it rebounds to $7.5, sell the original 800 units. You still hold 800 units, but your average cost drops to $7.5, reducing your loss for the day.
Remember two things: don’t reverse the operation sequence, and don’t be greedy waiting for higher prices.
**Grid Loop Arbitrage Method**
Lacking extra funds? Use this one.
For example, if a $5 altcoin is oscillating between $4 and $6, split your position into three parts: buy one part when it drops to $4, sell one part when it rises to $4.7; buy again at $4.3, sell at $5.3. Gradually profit from the spread, lowering your average cost without adding extra money.
**A Few Heartfelt Words at the End:**
First, limit refill attempts to three times; don’t keep adding until you become a project shareholder.
Second, don’t allocate more than 30% of your total funds to a single coin; diversification is crucial.
Third, always check the latest project updates before refilling—if the team runs away or tokens get unlocked and dumped, cut losses and exit immediately. Replenishing in such cases is just throwing money into a pit.
No coin market ever rises forever, but scientific position management makes a difference.