Took profit on the rejection setup—exited the earlier position at resistance and just loaded the dip. Locked in 45% gains on that quick one-day trade, then rolled into a fresh entry with reduced size.
Keeping the new position smaller is deliberate. It lets me secure some gains while staying exposed to the upside move I still expect. Better to manage risk this way than go all-in or sit completely flat.
Still holding for the longer-term play, but playing this as a swing trade in the near term. That's the balance between capturing moves and protecting capital—take what the market gives you, then reposition.
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AirdropBuffet
· 01-08 17:22
45% in one day, really ruthless. But reducing the position is indeed smart, much more comfortable than those who go all-in or refuse to move.
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LidoStakeAddict
· 01-07 17:14
45% a day, this technique is truly excellent. I have learned the method of reducing positions and rolling into new entries.
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OnchainArchaeologist
· 01-05 22:27
45% in one day is really impressive, the reaction speed is indeed fast. However, the "reduced size" move is a bit conservative; it feels like there's still room, but you're not daring to go all-in?
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failed_dev_successful_ape
· 01-05 22:27
A 45% daily return is an instant thrill, that's how it's played.
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ZkProofPudding
· 01-05 22:04
45% in one day? That's the pace I want—exit, retrace, re-enter—it's a living textbook.
Took profit on the rejection setup—exited the earlier position at resistance and just loaded the dip. Locked in 45% gains on that quick one-day trade, then rolled into a fresh entry with reduced size.
Keeping the new position smaller is deliberate. It lets me secure some gains while staying exposed to the upside move I still expect. Better to manage risk this way than go all-in or sit completely flat.
Still holding for the longer-term play, but playing this as a swing trade in the near term. That's the balance between capturing moves and protecting capital—take what the market gives you, then reposition.