This feeling is experienced by most new traders and sometimes even professionals, but it is mostly not a 'personal conspiracy' against you, but rather a result of market behavior and the way you enter and exit. There are several possible reasons:

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1. Entering and exiting at emotional moments

You often buy after you see the price has risen a lot (fear of missing out on profit), and here the buyers may have started to weaken and the sellers begin to take control, causing the price to reverse.

And when you sell, it may be because you saw a drop and fear set in, so you sell near the bottom, then buyers enter and the price rises.

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2. Trading with the 'herd'

Most traders move with the same emotions: fear and greed. If you act with them at the same time, you are buying and selling at the same points where market makers are exiting.

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3. Market makers and price traps

There are areas where the price is intentionally manipulated to gather trader liquidity (stop losses or market orders), making it seem like the market is watching you, but in reality, it is monitoring the places where trader orders accumulate.

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4. Lack of a clear plan

When you do not have pre-calculated entry and exit points based on technical analysis and risk management, the decision becomes emotional, which makes the timing wrong most of the time.

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📌 Summary:

Not because you are 'unlucky' or the market is targeting you, but because your entry and exit strategy needs adjustment. The solution is:

Entering based on prior analysis and not momentary feelings.

Setting stop losses and clear targets before entering the trade.

Avoid entering right after a strong price movement.

Learn to read support and resistance areas and traps.

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