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#比特币流动性 The most heartbreaking thing in a bear market is: seeing numbers on the K-line chart, but the chips in your account are long gone. When trading counterparties are sparse and trading volume is sluggish, prices start to fluctuate repeatedly—turning short-term gains into losses in an instant, trapping long-term heavy holders in a cycle of repeated washouts, and ultimately forcing them to exit in despair.
To survive in this kind of market, the key is twofold: first, hold your core position and avoid going all-in; second, learn to do rolling T+0 trades. But there is a deadly trap here—lack of decisiveness in execution. Many people hesitate when taking profits, hesitate when cutting losses, resulting in increasing their positions in circles, and finally being squeezed so tightly they can't turn around. No matter how volatile Bitcoin is, it still makes money for disciplined traders.
Losing money so quickly, earning so slowly, this is the fate of retail investors.
Rolling T+0 trading sounds simple, but executing it is really torturous.
Take profit and stop loss, anyone can talk about it, but when the moment comes, it's all about emotions.
The core position must be maintained, but the process of doing so can really wear a person out.
Discipline? Laughing my ass off, I lack that thing.
Seeing a bullish candlestick on the K-line but having no money in the pocket, this is my daily routine.
Speaking of which, rolling T+0 trading sounds attractive, but how many actually execute it?
Holding the core position firmly is indeed correct, but the problem is, where is the core, and who can see it accurately?
In a bear market, those who survive are the ruthless ones; the soft-hearted have already been washed out.
Discipline is such a thing—there are too many people who say one thing and do another.
To everyone reading this article, how much core position are you still holding now?
Damn it, it's the story of looking at the numbers on the chart and thinking "wait a bit longer," only to have the account wiped out.
Rolling T+0 trading sounds simple, but in reality, who isn't hesitant when it comes to execution.
I've long understood that discipline is worth much more than technical skills.
The bear market is so cruel—those with chips survive, while those without can only watch.
That's so true. When liquidity is low, it's the hunter's hunting time, retail investors have no chance at all.
Rolling T+0 trading sounds simple, but when you actually try to execute it, you realize how bad you are.
The harshest part of an account going to zero isn't the decline itself, but that one time you couldn't bring yourself to cut losses.
Hey, why do I always trade in the opposite direction? When others say to hold the core position, I go all in, and then... what about you guys?
Once the mindset collapses, all strategies are useless.