The world is collapsing, inflation is eating your lunch, and you still voluntarily post your trades online?
Who loves to “show everyone how I made 300% on SOL, and then how it left without me.” People who display their screenshots from Binance as trophies on a hunt. Proudly! Boldly! And… absolutely recklessly.
Because sharing your trades online is like:
Giving strangers your card number and saying: “Well, try to guess the PIN.”
Leaving a note on your apartment door: “I store 3 BTC here, do not enter!”
And all of this is happening against the backdrop of a financial war, where every second person is an “analyst,” and every third is a scammer on Telegram.
Who catches on to your trades? Everyone.
When you post:
“Here’s my long on $SOL, 5x leverage, entering from the level!”
This is read by:
Hackers in the basement.
Scammers from Instagram pretending to be girls from Dubai.
And even your ex, who now knows that you’ve made it.
And now seriously. Why does anyone need this?
Because your trades are information. And information is power.
You yourself are giving a clue about yourself:
Where you trade.
What amounts.
When you enter and exit.
If you seriously think that no one will try to use this against you, welcome to reality. Here, like in chess: one wrong move, and you are not a trader, but a Binance support client trying to regain access to your account.
“But I’m just sharing with friends!”
Of course. And friends share with friends. And here’s your trade — already in the “CryptoBillionaires_Signals_Free” chat, where some Turkish schoolboy is selling it for 5 USDT subscription.
Trading is not a show. It’s guerrilla warfare.
You must be like crypto-Batman. No one knows where you are, what you bought, and at what moment you jumped into DOGE at the bottom.
Only you, the chart, and the sacred feeling: “no one knows what I'm doing, and that's my strength.”
And now let's imagine the worst-case scenario:
You post:
“Took $XRP at 2.55, target $2.70, stop — 2.51”
And the next morning:
$XRP makes -12%,
your “subscribers” start writing: “where's the profit?”
you are no longer a trader, but an explanatory reflex on Telegram.
And lastly:
If you want to share something, share knowledge. Share experience. Share memes, after all. But don’t share your account, because:
Those who trade quietly live longer.