In the cryptocurrency world, the real way to make money is never by following the crowd or chasing hot coins, but by building strategies based on deep understanding and patient waiting.

1. Want to avoid worrying? Just do these few things.

If you don't want to be overwhelmed by watching the market every day and don't want your emotions to dictate your actions, remember this phrase:

Wait for the bottom after the bottom, hold positions with zero leverage, focus on the mainstream, and invest for the long term.

This is a way of 'not worrying but making money.' But its premise is 'patience,' the ability to endure long periods of fluctuation, until when the market becomes turbulent, you are still firmly seated on the boat.

2. Short-term trading relies on vision; focus on power, not popularity.

Short-term and ultra-short-term trading may seem exciting, but those who truly make money are those who watch closely and maintain a stable mindset.

The essence of short-term trading lies in two points:

  • The key to profit is the 'strength' of the price fluctuations—whether there is actual capital pushing the market.

  • The key to cutting losses is to recognize the trap of popularity—what is rising is popularity, not substance.

  • Many people are easily misled by 'hot coins,' but strong price increases do not necessarily indicate true newcomers; high popularity can easily become a harvesting tool.

3. The essence of speculation is counterintuitive behavior.

The core rule of speculation has not changed: speculate on the new, not the old. Human nature inherently prefers the familiar, but precisely because the public behaves this way, market makers can make money. The real opportunities are always hidden in the 'new' that the public has not noticed.

But 'new' is also disguised, so market makers set up five smoke screens.

Smoke screen one: The hierarchical nature of speculation.

Some coins drop below their initial issue price as soon as they are launched, and many think it's the end, but this is a pre-designed script.

The underlying reason is: Too many investors are trapped in the primary market; dropping below issue price is a way to offload and cleanse. Especially for domestic coins, the tricks are many and the traps are deep.

Smoke screen two: The intermittency of speculation.

There is a limit to human attention; market makers know they cannot keep pushing up or down indefinitely.

They use a 'sense of rhythm' to trade coins, making retail investors chase highs and cut lows amid the fluctuations of popularity.

For example:

  • True newcomers: A sudden multi-fold increase attracts attention before consolidating, then induces new investors to buy at high positions.

  • False newcomers: A group of coins rising 20-30% to create an atmosphere, then switching rankings within the day, deceiving the emotions of seasoned investors.

Smoke screen three: The brand nature of speculation.

Some old coins suddenly surge; it's not a launch, but a signal that they are 'still alive.'

Old coins are not easily abandoned by the market makers; they are occasionally pumped to maintain brand popularity and attract attention, only to be harvested again.

Smoke screen four: The overall nature of speculation.

Why do some popular coins seem lifeless? It's not that the project is poor; it's that the rhythm has not reached the public level.

The public's reaction is often more than one beat slow—it could be three beats or five beats. When most people begin to buy in, it is often when market makers are preparing to offload.

How to perceive the public rhythm? One direction is: Observe loss emotions. The true sign that the public is buying in is: buying leads to losses. This is the best node for major players to harvest.

Smoke screen five: The flexibility of speculation.

You think market makers are omnipotent, but they also fear being counter-harvested.

The real crazy operations happen after they have completed their exits.

Before exiting, trade cautiously; after exiting, begin to undermine confidence and eliminate remaining funds.

Most of this execution is not done by the market makers themselves but is driven by group emotions.

The most active participants are neither market makers nor novices, but the 'medium-sized investors'—those who talk a lot, act fast, and ride on the heat. They can amplify the rhythm and create emotional fluctuations, serving as amplifiers for harvesting.

4. Don't blindly trust 'teachers'; learn to deconstruct 'thought processes.'

Trading coins is not about 'learning knowledge' but about 'learning understanding.'

The saying goes, "A master leads you to the door, but cultivation is up to the individual." No matter whose advice you listen to or whose analysis you read, you must ultimately understand: from what perspective are they seeing this logic?

Ultimately, only what you discover for yourself is true understanding.

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