Newbies look at prices, while veterans look at proportions: how much it rises is not important; position weight determines the outcome.
"This coin doubled!" Newbies often feel smug about hitting a "moonshot coin." But when asked how much they bought, the answer is often "a few hundred USDT to test it out." As a result, no matter how much it rises, the final profit is still just a small amount.
This is one of the biggest differences between newbies and veterans: newbies look at price changes, while veterans look at position allocation.
For veterans, making money is never about which coin rises the most, but rather on which coins they dare to heavily invest. If a coin rises 10 times and you only invest 1%, the profit might not even match that of another coin that doubles with 30% allocation.
Position management is the fundamental determinant of the outcome.
When veterans strategize, they consider: what proportion of their total assets should be invested in high-risk MEME coins? How much should be invested in stable mainstream coins? Which portion is for long-term holding? Which part can be flexibly adjusted? Newbies, on the other hand, rush to where it's hot without any strategy for allocation weight, and in the end, even if they make a lot, it could all go to zero overnight due to another coin's crash.
In the crypto world, it’s not about what you bought, but what you heavily invested in.
Price increase is just an outcome; asset allocation is what determines victory or defeat. The reason veterans consistently win is that they not only bet correctly but are also more daring in their bets.