It's actually much more uncomfortable to follow the decline than to follow the rise. To be honest, after playing until now, I’ve finally seen through one thing—liquidity is fundamental, this is the bottom line. Without sufficient liquidity, all theories of value investing are nonsense. Funds can't come in or go out, no matter how valuable the coin is, what's the use? The market is something that has to be endured slowly; you can't rush it. Those trying to predict the next wave of the market, instead of staring at the K-line, should first ask themselves whether the coins they hold have liquidity support—that's the key.
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GateUser-9ad11037
· 01-05 20:10
Liquidity is a valid point, but how many people can actually achieve it... Most are still betting on the next wave to double.
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WhaleMinion
· 01-05 07:58
Liquidity has indeed been overlooked by many people. If you can't sell the coins you hold, even if the price goes up, it's all pointless.
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BTCBeliefStation
· 01-05 07:55
Liquidity, to put it simply, is the line between life and death. I've already suffered losses from it before.
Having more coins in hand doesn't matter; if you can't sell them, they're just paper.
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StealthMoon
· 01-05 07:52
Liquidity is indeed a pitfall that many people overlook; holding onto worthless coins is no different from holding paper money.
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TopBuyerForever
· 01-05 07:50
Liquidity is really often overlooked. I've experienced it before—having a lot of coins but unable to sell them... It's devastating.
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GasFeePhobia
· 01-05 07:35
Liquidity is king, no doubt. I previously got caught up with small coins; no matter how valuable they are, I couldn't sell. Thinking about it now, it's suffocating.
It's actually much more uncomfortable to follow the decline than to follow the rise. To be honest, after playing until now, I’ve finally seen through one thing—liquidity is fundamental, this is the bottom line. Without sufficient liquidity, all theories of value investing are nonsense. Funds can't come in or go out, no matter how valuable the coin is, what's the use? The market is something that has to be endured slowly; you can't rush it. Those trying to predict the next wave of the market, instead of staring at the K-line, should first ask themselves whether the coins they hold have liquidity support—that's the key.