Recently, after reviewing the recent BEAT operations, I feel that I didn't perform particularly well.
The biggest lesson is the lack of flexible response to the market maker's pacing of the pump. According to the plan, when encountering resistance levels, I should have exited first to lock in profits and then waited for a better opportunity to re-enter, but in practice, I always held onto some hope. This round of market maker operations was quite interesting — they wanted to induce short sellers while also testing the patience of the bulls. Under the pressure of long-term sideways consolidation, many participants chose to withdraw proactively, and it seemed the market maker didn't want retail investors to earn easily.
The most frustrating part during holding positions was the timing of selling. Every time I decided to cut losses, the market would suddenly surge, and I always sold at the low point. Although the saying "selling early always earns" is true, psychologically, there is still regret and discomfort.
Now I realize that precise control of buy and sell points is not about guessing but requires systematic learning and practice. Resistance levels, support levels, volume coordination, and capital flow judgment — all these need further deepening of understanding. Moving forward, I will focus more on these basic technical analysis skills, hoping to be more decisive and rational in the next round.
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AirDropMissed
· 7h ago
The moment I sell, I feel so hopeless... It happens every time, as if the market maker is watching my trading records haha
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AirdropHunterWang
· 7h ago
What's the point of learning more after selling out? Just go all in and it's all done, haha.
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SeasonedInvestor
· 7h ago
Well... this is my daily routine. Every time the market dips, it rallies, and my mindset gets shattered.
It's really uncomfortable the moment I sell in a panic, but we have to admit that the big players are indeed smarter than retail investors.
Technical analysis needs to be solidly learned; relying on intuition will eventually get you eaten.
It's called rationality, but actually greed is still at play.
Next round, we'll continue to be educated. After all, we're just leeks.
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ForkTrooper
· 7h ago
Regret after selling, regret after cutting losses, that's trading hahaha
Recently, after reviewing the recent BEAT operations, I feel that I didn't perform particularly well.
The biggest lesson is the lack of flexible response to the market maker's pacing of the pump. According to the plan, when encountering resistance levels, I should have exited first to lock in profits and then waited for a better opportunity to re-enter, but in practice, I always held onto some hope. This round of market maker operations was quite interesting — they wanted to induce short sellers while also testing the patience of the bulls. Under the pressure of long-term sideways consolidation, many participants chose to withdraw proactively, and it seemed the market maker didn't want retail investors to earn easily.
The most frustrating part during holding positions was the timing of selling. Every time I decided to cut losses, the market would suddenly surge, and I always sold at the low point. Although the saying "selling early always earns" is true, psychologically, there is still regret and discomfort.
Now I realize that precise control of buy and sell points is not about guessing but requires systematic learning and practice. Resistance levels, support levels, volume coordination, and capital flow judgment — all these need further deepening of understanding. Moving forward, I will focus more on these basic technical analysis skills, hoping to be more decisive and rational in the next round.