Most people get caught in a linguistic trap around trading. The word itself pulls focus to the wrong place—makes you think the transaction is what matters. But here's the thing: that trade you just executed? It's not the actual goal. It's the tool.
What you're really after is a position. A particular exposure, a specific market stance. The transaction is just the mechanism, the vehicle that gets you there. Two completely different levels of abstraction, yet we collapse them into one word.
Once you reframe it that way, everything shifts. You stop obsessing over the trade and start thinking about what the trade accomplishes. Position strategy beats transaction obsession every single time.
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SmartContractPhobia
· 6h ago
Really, most people are deceived by the word "trading," only focusing on the moment of buying and selling, but end up confused about what they truly want.
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To put it simply, trading is just a means; position strategy is the core of the game. Those who understand this have already made a fortune.
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That's why retail investors are always cut; because they care about whether each trade makes money, rather than what position they are actually holding.
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On second thought, position strategy vs transaction obsession—I've never really clarified this difference before.
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Interesting, many people have indeed got the key point backwards.
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Position is king; transaction is just a process. Once you understand this logic, your trading mindset becomes much clearer.
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DegenRecoveryGroup
· 6h ago
Hey, this angle is pretty good. I’ve been struggling with entry and exit points before, never thought about that what I really need is a position-taking mindset.
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Exactly, too many people focus on watching charts and candlesticks, but forget why they opened a position in the first place.
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Position vs transaction, these are indeed two different things. Most retail traders get them mixed up.
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Every time, they get caught up in the trade itself and forget that strategy is the core... kind of eye-opening.
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Maybe it’s a mindset issue. Executing a single trade is easy, but establishing a true position logic is the hard part.
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Damn, I think I’ve been stuck in transaction obsession all along, no wonder I keep losing...
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Reevaluating this framework, I feel like my trading skills can level up.
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MEVSandwichVictim
· 6h ago
You're right, most people are trapped by this term, constantly watching the ups and downs of individual trades... they actually don't understand what they truly want.
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Position is the key, trading is just a means. Understanding this is how you win.
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So essentially, we're building exposure, not betting on this one trade... Those who understand this make money, those who don't are still chasing orders.
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Damn, that's why I've been losing all along... constantly thinking about how to execute trades, never considering what position I actually want.
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Indeed, once you separate transaction and position, everything becomes clear. The strategic levels are different.
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Nailed it, but unfortunately, nine out of ten people are still obsessed with the win rate of individual trades. Wake up, everyone.
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No matter how much you talk, trading is an art, and position is the way. Even if your skills are high, it won't help.
Why We Misframe Trading
Most people get caught in a linguistic trap around trading. The word itself pulls focus to the wrong place—makes you think the transaction is what matters. But here's the thing: that trade you just executed? It's not the actual goal. It's the tool.
What you're really after is a position. A particular exposure, a specific market stance. The transaction is just the mechanism, the vehicle that gets you there. Two completely different levels of abstraction, yet we collapse them into one word.
Once you reframe it that way, everything shifts. You stop obsessing over the trade and start thinking about what the trade accomplishes. Position strategy beats transaction obsession every single time.