Before the price is determined, shouldn't we first set a bidding range? Then, as the time approaches, we can adjust the order size based on the actual situation. For example, if $BTC is currently quoted at $1, the original plan for a position of 600 units might not be applicable, and adjusting it to around 60 units on the spot would be more flexible. This way, you can lock in the main risks without being overly heavy-handed. When the market is volatile, this kind of phased flexible strategy is often more effective than rigid plans.
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ConfusedWhale
· 16h ago
Haha, isn't this exactly what I've been doing all along? You're so right.
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LayerZeroEnjoyer
· 12-11 08:40
There's some substance to this. I think the phased reduction logic is reliable, but the prerequisite is that you must have discipline and actually execute it properly; otherwise, it's still easy to FOMO and chase the high.
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PanicSeller69
· 12-09 09:47
Haha, alright. It sounds good, but in practice it's still easy to get slapped in the face.
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StakeOrRegret
· 12-09 09:42
Flexible is flexible, but when it comes down to the crucial moment, don't you still lose your cool? 😅
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TradFiRefugee
· 12-09 09:33
It's just empty talk; when the market actually fluctuates, your mindset completely collapses.
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TokenTaxonomist
· 12-09 09:25
actually per my data analysis, this whole "flexible sizing" framework is taxonomically flawed... you're basically describing reactive position management which statistically underperforms systematic rebalancing protocols. let me pull up my spreadsheet real quick because the math here doesn't check out
Before the price is determined, shouldn't we first set a bidding range? Then, as the time approaches, we can adjust the order size based on the actual situation. For example, if $BTC is currently quoted at $1, the original plan for a position of 600 units might not be applicable, and adjusting it to around 60 units on the spot would be more flexible. This way, you can lock in the main risks without being overly heavy-handed. When the market is volatile, this kind of phased flexible strategy is often more effective than rigid plans.