1. Position: The ratio of actual investment to actual funds in the account.
2. Full Position: Using all funds to buy virtual currency, also called 'going all in'.
3. Reducing Position: Selling part of the virtual currency but not all.
4. Heavy Position: Compared to available funds, the share of virtual currency is large.
5. Light Position: Compared to available funds, the share of available funds is large.
6. Empty Position: Selling all virtual currency held and converting everything to cash.
7. Take Profit: After achieving certain profits, selling the held virtual currency to secure gains.
8. Stop Loss: After losses reach a certain level, selling the held virtual currency to prevent further losses.
9. Bull Market: Prices continue to rise, with optimistic prospects.
10. Bear Market: Prices continue to fall, with bleak prospects.
11. Bullish (Bull Players): Buyers who believe the price will rise in the future, buying currency to sell at a profit later when the price increases.
12. Bearish (Bear Players): Sellers who believe the price will drop in the future, selling held currency (or borrowing currency from the trading platform) to buy back at a lower price for profit.
13. Opening Position: Buying virtual currency, also called 'establishing a position'.
14. Averaging Down: Buying virtual currency in batches, for example: first buying 1 BTC, then buying another 1 BTC.
15. Full Position: Buying all funds in one go for virtual currency.
16. Rebound: When the price drops too quickly, it adjusts and rises again.
17. Consolidation (Sideways): The price fluctuates within a small range, stabilizing the currency price.
18. Gradual Decline: The price of the currency slowly decreases.
19. Waterfall: The price of the currency drops rapidly and significantly.
20. Cutting Losses: After buying virtual currency, if the price drops, selling to avoid further losses. Or after borrowing currency to short, if the price rises, buying back at a loss.
21. Being Trapped: Expecting the price to rise, but it drops after buying; or expecting the price to drop, but it rises after selling.
22. Breaking Free: After buying virtual currency, the price drops causing temporary book losses, but later the price rebounds, turning losses into profits.
23. Missing Out: Selling virtual currency due to a pessimistic outlook, but the price continues to rise, missing the opportunity to buy back and thus missing profit.
24. Overbought: The price continues to rise to a certain height, the buying power is basically exhausted, and the price is about to drop.
25. Oversold: The price continues to drop to a certain low point, the selling power is basically exhausted, and the price is about to rebound.
26. Luring Buyers: After a long period of consolidation, the possibility of a drop is high, most shorts have sold their virtual currency, suddenly the shorts push the price up, tempting buyers to think the price will rise and buy in, resulting in being trapped by the shorts.
27. Luring Sellers: After the bulls buy virtual currency, they intentionally suppress the price, making the bears think the price will drop, thus selling off, resulting in falling into the bulls' trap.
28. Chasing Highs and Selling Lows: Going short at a declining position and going long at a rising high.
29. Funding Rate: Each exchange has a funding rate, which varies with different market conditions, reflecting the long-short ratio, generally applicable to clients doing long-term contracts.#币安HODLer空投LA #SECETF审批 #币安钱包TGE #币安八周年 #突破交易策略