#美联储回购协议计划 Market fluctuations often bring about anxiety, which is usually the biggest enemy. Many novice traders fall into this vicious cycle: the more eager they are to turn things around, the easier they get trapped; the more diligently they watch the market and trade frequently, the faster they incur losses.



Why is this? Because greed and impatience distort judgment. The three most common fatal mindsets are: first, chasing highs and selling lows—buying in when prices rise and panicking to cut losses when they fall; second, overtrading—treating short-term fluctuations as opportunities, while the costs are eaten up by transaction fees; third, going all-in—betting all chips on a single trade, and a single mistake can send you back to square one.

True trading masters are not the busiest, but the calmest. During periods of Federal Reserve policy fluctuations and unstable market sentiment, being able to control your impulses may be more valuable than any technical analysis.
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ForkInTheRoadvip
· 5h ago
You're so right. I used to be the kind of person who would stare at the charts until my eyes hurt, and as a result, I lost money the fastest. The ones truly making money are sleeping, while we're here itching to click, it's hilarious. Recently, with the Fed's moves, the more I watch, the more annoyed I get. I might as well delete the app. Now, it's actually going up.
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DegenApeSurfervip
· 5h ago
I knew it, when your fingers itch, it's the time to lose money. This blood and tears lesson really is no joke. --- Holding your fingers really works better than watching any K-line chart. I'm the one who frequently trades until I doubt life itself. --- The old-fashioned method of chasing gains and selling losses is outdated. Newbies are faster than each other, and each one is more miserable. --- Anxiety is indeed the biggest enemy, but the market is too, haha. --- Lying flat and not watching the market is when I make the most money. What does this mean? --- Controlling your fingers means winning more than half the battle. Simple and straightforward, but really makes sense. --- Whenever the Federal Reserve makes a move, I want to trade in the opposite direction, but I keep getting slapped in the face. I just can't learn. --- Heavy positions once take me back to the pre-liberation days. Too fitting, it hurts. --- The more I watch, the more I want to trade; the less I watch, the more I earn. Who can explain this paradox? --- Calm trading hands live the most comfortably in a bear market; busy traders have already collapsed.
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SighingCashiervip
· 5h ago
Exactly right, I'm that fool who loses more the more I watch the market, I just can't stop my fingers from moving.
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LightningWalletvip
· 5h ago
You're so right. These past two months have been a living warning... I get itchy whenever I see a rise, but frequent trading has cost me several points just in fees. The biggest enemy is really oneself, especially the greedy self.
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Hash_Banditvip
· 5h ago
been there, seen too many miners panic-sell when difficulty spikes. hodling beats hypertrading every single time, fr
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BlockchainBouncervip
· 5h ago
That's so true. I'm the kind of person who gets trembling hands when watching the market, and as a result, I end up losing more the more I trade. Finger management is really an invisible skill, more effective than any candlestick chart.
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