You have $1000. And you don't throw it into the market all at once, as if in a casino.
❌ This is a beginner's mistake: bought everything at the highs — and then you watch your coins drop while you sit in a loss.
✅ It's better to break the deposit into parts. Imagine you don't have $1000, but 20 bills of $50.
Now you're ready not to jump at the first price but to buy gradually as the price falls.
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### 🎯 Example: you want to buy a coin, but wisely
You place 5 orders — it's like 5 traps at different price levels:
| Order | Coin Price | Order Amount |
|-------|-------------|---------------|
| 1 | $10.00 | $50 |
| 2 | $9.50 | $50 |
| 3 | $9.00 | $50 |
| 4 | $8.50 | $50 |
| 5 | $8.00 | $50 |
🔽 If the price starts to decrease — your orders will trigger one after another, and you will enter at better and better prices.
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🟢 This is DEPOSIT ORDERS — a grid strategy, where you don't catch a falling knife but build your position in parts, safely.
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#### 💡 And what if you want to buy 10 different coins?
Just divide the deposit into 10 parts. For each coin — $100.
And then divide that $100 into 5 orders of $20 each.
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🧠 The main rule: don't fall in love with one price and don't think you can guess the entry point.
You're not a fortune teller — so it's better to enter in parts, and your nerves will thank you.