The recent performance of the crypto market has been quite interesting. Those sectors and trends that were previously the hottest have experienced nearly across-the-board declines. The market is definitely cooling down, and investor enthusiasm is receding. The overall market performance remains relatively stable, though the opening shows some weakness.
My judgment on market conditions hasn't changed. Short-term adjustments and pullbacks aren't necessarily bad things. The key is to clarify what your goals are and what you're doing. It's especially important to be vigilant against one trap—chasing rallies in high-risk zones while using various reasoning to convince yourself it's the right move. This kind of self-deception is the easiest way to get trapped.
From the perspective of our own strategy, this wave of adjustment has had almost no impact. The reason is simple: our selections all have performance as underlying support—we're not betting on probabilities. Meanwhile, we maintain flexibility in swing trading, doing what needs to be done when it needs to be done, and observing quietly when observation is called for. Stable mindset, stable method.
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TokenTaxonomist
· 01-15 11:55
ngl the "performance-backed thesis" angle here is basically just another form of survivorship bias wrapped in spreadsheet confidence... let me pull up my data on this
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SoliditySurvivor
· 01-15 11:54
Chasing the hype with self-deception is the easiest way to go bankrupt; I've seen too many cases.
Fundamental performance support is the real key; pure probabilistic gambling will eventually fail.
This round of adjustment is a perfect opportunity to test what you're really doing.
A calm and steady mindset is truly stable, not just lip service.
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HodlTheDoor
· 01-15 11:34
Chasing the hype can fool yourself temporarily, but the account can't lie; you still need to look at the fundamentals.
That's right, the easiest trap now is to brainwash yourself.
The adjustment period is actually a good time to review your strategy; don't just mess around.
The difference between performance support and gambling is indeed worlds apart.
Most people lose money because of "self-consistent logic," fooling themselves with one justification after another.
Watching and waiting is easy to say, but truly holding on is very difficult.
In a sector rotation combined with a bear market atmosphere, not sticking to your strategy will definitely scare you out.
I see through this wave of adjustment; it's just a sieve—whoever has a real plan will be the ones who buy intentionally, and those without support from performance are just empty theories.
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HorizonHunter
· 01-15 11:29
Chasing gains and panic selling—that's literally a suicide strategy. Basically you're just brainwashing yourself.
Fundamental performance support > gambling on probability—that's the hard truth.
Bear markets actually expose who has real logic and who's just all talk.
Stable mindset leads to stable method, but most people just can't hold steady.
The ones who survive this correction round are basically the ones who already knew exactly what they were doing.
The recent performance of the crypto market has been quite interesting. Those sectors and trends that were previously the hottest have experienced nearly across-the-board declines. The market is definitely cooling down, and investor enthusiasm is receding. The overall market performance remains relatively stable, though the opening shows some weakness.
My judgment on market conditions hasn't changed. Short-term adjustments and pullbacks aren't necessarily bad things. The key is to clarify what your goals are and what you're doing. It's especially important to be vigilant against one trap—chasing rallies in high-risk zones while using various reasoning to convince yourself it's the right move. This kind of self-deception is the easiest way to get trapped.
From the perspective of our own strategy, this wave of adjustment has had almost no impact. The reason is simple: our selections all have performance as underlying support—we're not betting on probabilities. Meanwhile, we maintain flexibility in swing trading, doing what needs to be done when it needs to be done, and observing quietly when observation is called for. Stable mindset, stable method.