This potential asset is likely to become the next leader under Binance Alpha! Right now, it’s a good time to accumulate at these low levels, waiting for it to moon so we can take some serious profits. What do you think? 🚀 #掘金者 #SENTIS
Playing contracts, staring at the charts day in and day out, pulling all-nighters to hold positions, getting liquidated in the end—what a waste; holding $SENTIS without watching the charts, guessing market trends, just chilling and riding the trend is the way the average person should make money…#SENTIS
$SENTIS This token isn't just the king of outperforming the market; in my view, it's going to smash the market by several multiples, the exponential kind...
Holding this this year will put you ahead of 99.9% of (_______) in the market, fill in the blank with whatever you like, for example: professional "traders" or the broader term "investors"...
I'll keep a daily update as proof until it goes live on Binance or hits 10U+
HODLing on a coin basis for the long haul, no need to watch the charts like a hawk, just treat it like mining. Not asking for much, just keep raising the stop-loss, and make some profits to cover the fees #BNB 😀 $BNB
After years of trading crypto, I've finally seen through the truth of contracts and shitcoins.
I've been trading crypto and doing contracts for years, starting off with FOMO in spot trading, then getting hooked on the long/short game in contracts; it's been quite the journey, full of reflections.
When the market is hot, you might catch a wave now and then, but most of the time it's a rollercoaster ride—staring at the charts, pulling all-nighters, holding those positions with anxiety, and completely worn out.
The overall crypto market isn't what it used to be; it's more dips than pumps, and most shitcoins are just one-day wonders—jump in and you're either bag holding or watching it go to zero. Contracts seem like they can make money in both directions, but in reality, high leverage often leads to liquidation and constant stop-losses; it's tough for the average trader to see long-term consistent profits—ending up working for the market instead.