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Recently, when discussing market trends with friends, I keep being asked the same question—what exactly is the operational logic behind this wave of Bitcoin movements? To be honest, we've already discussed this extensively in our group, and the core idea is to seek breakthroughs.
Currently, looking at the Bitcoin daily chart, it has already touched the 99 moving average, which is a key resistance level. This position often involves adjustments, fluctuations, and even repeated tests, which is perfectly normal market behavior. Perhaps it will ultimately end with a stop-loss, just like many times before—exiting with a loss. But I still want to hold for a while and don’t need to rush into a decision.
Having traded for so many years, everyone knows my style: I’m not afraid of losses, but I am afraid of not holding onto the positions that should be stopped out. When the trend shows signs of inconsistency, I cut it without hesitation, rather than stubbornly holding out in hopes of a reversal.
In fact, disagreements at key levels are very common—everyone’s charts, cycles, and indicators are different, so naturally opinions vary. The real issue is that trading ultimately comes back to the plan you set for yourself. Once you’ve made a plan, you must strictly follow it and not let short-term market fluctuations pull you off track. That is the fundamental logic for long-term stable profits.
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Honestly, you still have to trust your own plan and not be led by short-term fluctuations.
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This wave is indeed hard to judge, but discipline in stop-loss is more important than anything.
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After discussing in the group for a long time, it still depends on individual execution ability. Once the plan is made, it must be carried out decisively.
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Not afraid of losing money, but afraid of holding onto the wrong positions—that's a punch to the heart.
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Disagreements at key levels are very normal; in the end, it still depends on who has stronger discipline.
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I also want to observe a bit more, but once there's a signal that’s off, I’ll cut immediately. Anyway, this isn’t the first time losing money.
Market discussions are still bad, and they remain bad. The real issue is the lack of mindset, that's what’s truly rotten.
There are quite a few people who can't hold onto stop-loss orders, but the ones who can't hold onto the take-profit orders are the ones who are truly exhausted.