Position: Refers to the ratio of actual investment to actual invested funds.
Full Position: All funds are used to buy virtual currencies.
Reduce Position: Sell part of the virtual currencies but not all.
Heavy Position: The share of virtual currencies is larger compared to funds.
Light Position: The share of funds is larger compared to virtual currencies.
Empty Position: Sell all the virtual currencies held, converting everything into funds.
Take Profit: Sell the held virtual currencies after achieving a certain profit to secure the earnings.
Stop Loss: Sell the held virtual currencies after losing to a certain extent to prevent further losses.
Bull Market: Prices continue to rise, and the outlook is optimistic.
Bear Market: Prices continue to decline, and the outlook is bleak.
Bull (Going Long): The buyer believes that the price will rise in the future, buys currencies, and sells them at a high price for profit after the price rises.
Bear (Short Selling): The seller believes that the price will decline in the future, sells part of the currencies they hold (or borrows currencies from the trading platform), locks in the profit when the price declines to a certain level, and also avoids risks.
Establish Position: Buy virtual currencies.
DCA (Dollar-Cost Averaging): Buy virtual currencies in batches, e.g., first buy 1 BTC, then buy another 1 BTC.
Rebound: When the price declines too quickly, it adjusts and rises.
Consolidation (Sideways): The price fluctuation is small, and the currency price is stable.
Gradual Decline: The price of the currency is slowly decreasing.
Plunge (Waterfall): The price of the currency falls rapidly and significantly.
Cut Loss: After buying virtual currencies, the price declines, and to avoid further losses, the virtual currencies are sold at a loss. Or after shorting, if the price rises, buying back at a loss.
Trapped: Expecting the price to rise, but after buying, the price declines; or expecting the price to decline, but after selling, the price rises.
Deleveraging: After buying virtual currencies, the price declines causing temporary paper losses, but then the price rebounds, turning losses into profits.
Missed Opportunity: After selling virtual currencies due to a bearish outlook, the price rises all the way, resulting in failure to buy in time and thus missing the profit.
Overbought: The price of the currency continues to rise to a certain height, the buying power is basically exhausted, and the price is about to decline.
Oversold: The price of the currency continues to decline to a certain low point, the selling power is basically exhausted, and the price is about to rise.
False Rally: The currency price has been consolidating for a long time, and the likelihood of a decline is high. Most bears have sold their virtual currencies, and suddenly the bears drive up the price, enticing the bulls to believe that the price will rise, leading them to buy in, only for the bears to suppress the price, trapping the bulls.
False Short: After the bulls buy virtual currencies, they intentionally suppress the price, making the bears believe that the price will decline, leading them to sell, resulting in falling into the bulls' trap.
The market never lacks opportunities; the question is whether you can seize them. With experienced people and the right team, we can earn more! There are still positions in the battle team, hurry up!
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