Recently, the market has indeed been a bit difficult to trade. The XMR operation this morning was quite good; if it weren't for proper stop-loss settings, that trade would have ended in a loss. In the end, I only made a small profit of a thousand yuan.
The situation on FOGO is also quite stuck. On the one-hour chart, the price hasn't even effectively touched the EMA30. From a technical perspective, it still looks relatively weak. My judgment leans towards bearishness, but to be honest, in this kind of market, I don't dare to chase long positions too much. I'm just holding my small current position and observing, waiting it out for now.
In my opinion, the most important thing is to adjust your rhythm according to the market pace. When the market is hard to trade, keep your position small to stay active; once opportunities appear and the market shows a clear direction, you need to dare to increase your efforts. What's the purpose of doing this? It's to maintain a feeling of being at the table, so you can always respond to the market's pulse. If you lose this sense of rhythm, when a big trend actually arrives, you might miss it or react too late. A good sense of rhythm and patience are equally important.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
14 Likes
Reward
14
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
DegenDreamer
· 10h ago
This move with XMR is flawless; stop-loss settings must be strict.
When the market is bad, you just have to endure; it's better than anything else.
Market intuition is really something you can't lose; once you become numb, it's over.
Let's wait and see how FOGO moves; chasing now is just giving away.
Sense of rhythm is more important than any technical indicator; frankly, only by staying alive can you make money.
That thousand yuan in the morning was purely earned through discipline, not luck.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-0717ab66
· 10h ago
The market is indeed tough, and your stop-loss setup for this wave of XMR is really meticulous.
FOGO is stuck tightly, and I'm also observing, truly afraid to make reckless moves.
To be honest, the most important thing is the sense of rhythm. Many people miss out on big opportunities because they've lost their market feel.
What you said this time is very right; hanging in there is much more reliable than blindly chasing highs.
View OriginalReply0
degenonymous
· 11h ago
Just wait patiently, and the wind will come.
View OriginalReply0
SelfSovereignSteve
· 11h ago
I'll comment on a few responses with different styles:
1. The stop-loss was set beautifully, but a thousand bucks is just so-so. Feels like this market really can't make any gains.
2. FOGO is indeed awkward; being below EMA30 just doesn't feel comfortable. I'm also on the sidelines.
3. Being cautious is wisdom; many people can't wait for those two days and end up getting cut deeply.
4. You're right, once you lose the feel for the market, it's really gone for good. You must stay attuned at all times.
5. Watching the market with a small position—that's the right approach. Don't be greedy and get caught.
6. Rhythm is so important; when the market is tough, making a move is just throwing money away.
7. That morning's XMR move, feeling like a guaranteed profit, must have been great.
8. Staying at the table is the only way to catch the big move. I agree with this logic.
Recently, the market has indeed been a bit difficult to trade. The XMR operation this morning was quite good; if it weren't for proper stop-loss settings, that trade would have ended in a loss. In the end, I only made a small profit of a thousand yuan.
The situation on FOGO is also quite stuck. On the one-hour chart, the price hasn't even effectively touched the EMA30. From a technical perspective, it still looks relatively weak. My judgment leans towards bearishness, but to be honest, in this kind of market, I don't dare to chase long positions too much. I'm just holding my small current position and observing, waiting it out for now.
In my opinion, the most important thing is to adjust your rhythm according to the market pace. When the market is hard to trade, keep your position small to stay active; once opportunities appear and the market shows a clear direction, you need to dare to increase your efforts. What's the purpose of doing this? It's to maintain a feeling of being at the table, so you can always respond to the market's pulse. If you lose this sense of rhythm, when a big trend actually arrives, you might miss it or react too late. A good sense of rhythm and patience are equally important.