Many traders who are new to the crypto space share the same frustration: their accounts drop rapidly but rise painfully slowly. The problem likely lies in their trading approach.



There are mainly two popular trading styles on the market, which are like two different worlds.

**First Type: Left-Side Trading (Predictive)**

This approach involves making predictions. When the price drops to a certain level, thinking "it's low enough," they jump in and wait for a rebound; when the price rises to a certain height, thinking "it's the top," they quickly exit and wait for a pullback. In simple terms: the trend hasn't even formed yet, but you've already placed your bets.

To illustrate, it's like seeing someone jump from a building; you judge they're about to land, but you reach out to catch them while they're still in mid-air—what usually happens? After buying in, the market continues to fall, with the bottom below the expected level. The account loses money every day, unrealized losses deepen, and how long can your mindset hold? Even if you eventually turn a profit, it's just a slow climb, earning little by little, and at the slightest disturbance, you want to run. That's why beginners tend to: lose like lightning, earn like a snail.

**Second Type: Right-Side Trading (Confirmation)**

This approach never involves predictions. They abandon guessing the bottom or top, and only act once the trend is fully confirmed. When the market hits the bottom and starts to rise, they enter; when it peaks and begins to fall, they exit. The core principle is: only look at facts that have already happened.

Using the same analogy: only when the person has landed steadily, stood up, and started walking upstairs do I follow. Never touch the uncertainty while they're still in mid-air.

Entry and exit are based on solid signals—price making new highs, moving averages turning upward, trading volume suddenly surging. These are facts already reflected in the candlesticks, not your subjective feelings. You buy into a clear trend, not vague hunches.

**Which one should you choose?**

Left-side trading seems to catch cheaper positions, but in reality, it's a game for experts, with high thresholds and a high failure rate. Right-side trading, although you can't buy at the lowest price or sell at the highest, has a more stable win rate and is more suitable for most retail traders. Instead of obsessing over small price differences, it's better to grasp the big trend.
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TokenDustCollectorvip
· 4h ago
Trading on the right side is indeed more stable, but in practice, I still tend to be greedy, always wanting to catch two more points.
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metaverse_hermitvip
· 4h ago
Right-side trading is stable, although the profits are not as quick, but the sleep quality is good.
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GasFeeSobbervip
· 4h ago
Left-side trading is a gambler's mentality. I've seen too many people like that, with accounts wiped out completely. Right-side trading may be slower, but at least you won't get trapped and doubt your life. Isn't living steadily more satisfying?
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GasFeeTherapistvip
· 4h ago
It's the same old story. Those who chase gains and sell in a panic should take a look. Really, stop guessing blindly.
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ProveMyZKvip
· 4h ago
Right-side trading is the way to go; left-side players are all in a suicidal bottom-fishing spree. That's how I got through it— the more the left side buys, the faster they lose, really.
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ApeDegenvip
· 4h ago
It's the same old story. I just want to ask, why have I never lost on right-side trading? --- To put it simply, even with real trading, those signals aren't foolproof either. --- I've definitely been wiped out on the left side before. Now I only follow the trend. --- I agree with this logic. Instead of guessing the bottom, it's better to follow the trend. --- It still depends on individual risk tolerance. Nothing is absolute. --- Listening to the right side feels more stable, but you also miss out on quite a few gains. --- Newcomers should learn this—less messing around, less losing money. --- Honestly, I've tried both methods. The right side definitely has a better mindset. --- Guessing the bottom is too heartbreaking; I only understood that later.
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