The most common scene in trading: rushing to enter the market, immediately reversing, a floating loss alert sounds, and hands start to itch—"Add a bit more to lower the cost, then exit when break-even."
And then? The position gets heavier and heavier, and the heart becomes more and more anxious. A small loss that could have been decisively cut is dragged into a deadlock of full position being trapped.
Or the opposite scenario: seeing a little profit and eagerly adding to the position, only to completely ruin the original favorable risk-reward ratio, resulting in endless worry and indecision.
Think carefully, the problem isn't really about "adding or not," but whether you're amplifying an already confirmed advantage or giving a failing logic a second chance.
**The essence of adding to a position is actually very cruel**
Simply put, it's four words: "Same logic, more chips." If the logic is correct, profits will multiply; if the logic is wrong, losses will accelerate. The only dividing line is—does your initial logic still hold up?
The same "buy more as it falls" can have vastly different outcomes.
Some people plan their adds in advance: before entering, they set how many trades, how much per trade, what the total loss limit is, and keep each step within controllable limits. This kind of adding is a premeditated bet.
Others are emotionally driven to add temporarily: impulsively adding during a dip, convincing themselves with excuses like "it won't fall further," ignoring total position size and worst-case scenarios, essentially exchanging money for psychological comfort.
The former has a success rate; the latter is basically suicidal averaging down.
**"Buy more as it falls" is only effective in specific situations**
First, it must be spot trading or low-leverage—adding on high-leverage contracts is akin to speeding up liquidation, don't try it; second, the overall logical framework must be complete; third, funds should be planned in advance, with each step's risk quantifiable. All four conditions are indispensable.
**Four signals to immediately stop**
First, your reason for adding is "just not willing to give up"; second, you can't answer where your stop-loss is; third, your logic has already been broken, yet you're still staring at the cost price in a daze; fourth, the only goal has become "break even and run."
When these situations occur, you're no longer trading—you're being held hostage by obsession.
**Three bottom lines for beginners**
Only add to profitable positions, never add during losses. All adds must be pre-planned. Remember these two, then ask yourself three questions before acting: Does the logic still hold? Can I afford this loss? Is there a way out? If you can't answer one, don't add.
Top traders are not the ones who add the most aggressively, but those who know when to stop. Adding is like a knife—used correctly, it's a weapon; used wrongly, it's self-harm.
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StableGenius
· 12-26 13:51
The number of accounts killed by the words "Unwilling" is even greater than those wiped out by liquidation itself.
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PrivacyMaximalist
· 12-26 13:51
If you're not willing to give up, increase your position. This is the most common way to sacrifice oneself.
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GmGmNoGn
· 12-26 13:48
Damn, isn't this my self-portrait from last week? Replenishing my position until I doubt my life.
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SybilAttackVictim
· 12-26 13:27
Ah... that really hits home. I'm the kind of fool who can't accept defeat and keeps adding positions, trapping the profits inside.
The most common scene in trading: rushing to enter the market, immediately reversing, a floating loss alert sounds, and hands start to itch—"Add a bit more to lower the cost, then exit when break-even."
And then? The position gets heavier and heavier, and the heart becomes more and more anxious. A small loss that could have been decisively cut is dragged into a deadlock of full position being trapped.
Or the opposite scenario: seeing a little profit and eagerly adding to the position, only to completely ruin the original favorable risk-reward ratio, resulting in endless worry and indecision.
Think carefully, the problem isn't really about "adding or not," but whether you're amplifying an already confirmed advantage or giving a failing logic a second chance.
**The essence of adding to a position is actually very cruel**
Simply put, it's four words: "Same logic, more chips." If the logic is correct, profits will multiply; if the logic is wrong, losses will accelerate. The only dividing line is—does your initial logic still hold up?
The same "buy more as it falls" can have vastly different outcomes.
Some people plan their adds in advance: before entering, they set how many trades, how much per trade, what the total loss limit is, and keep each step within controllable limits. This kind of adding is a premeditated bet.
Others are emotionally driven to add temporarily: impulsively adding during a dip, convincing themselves with excuses like "it won't fall further," ignoring total position size and worst-case scenarios, essentially exchanging money for psychological comfort.
The former has a success rate; the latter is basically suicidal averaging down.
**"Buy more as it falls" is only effective in specific situations**
First, it must be spot trading or low-leverage—adding on high-leverage contracts is akin to speeding up liquidation, don't try it; second, the overall logical framework must be complete; third, funds should be planned in advance, with each step's risk quantifiable. All four conditions are indispensable.
**Four signals to immediately stop**
First, your reason for adding is "just not willing to give up"; second, you can't answer where your stop-loss is; third, your logic has already been broken, yet you're still staring at the cost price in a daze; fourth, the only goal has become "break even and run."
When these situations occur, you're no longer trading—you're being held hostage by obsession.
**Three bottom lines for beginners**
Only add to profitable positions, never add during losses. All adds must be pre-planned. Remember these two, then ask yourself three questions before acting: Does the logic still hold? Can I afford this loss? Is there a way out? If you can't answer one, don't add.
Top traders are not the ones who add the most aggressively, but those who know when to stop. Adding is like a knife—used correctly, it's a weapon; used wrongly, it's self-harm.