The cryptocurrency market has never been something that everyone can understand.
Ten years ago, you could make money by blindly buying coins; now, even with your eyes wide open, you might not make a profit. This market is like running a hot pot restaurant; anyone could set up a stall and make quick money before, but now you need to build a chain brand and manage the supply chain.

A few years ago was truly a wild era. In 2017, Bitcoin skyrocketed from a few thousand to over a hundred thousand, like a rocket. Back then, even grandmothers knew that buying EOS could make them rich; one project raised 4 billion dollars in five days, faster than a money printer. Making money back then relied on three points: having a big appetite for risk, acting quickly, and being well-informed; after all, no one understood the technology, so people bought based on who was shouting the loudest.

Everything has changed now. Big Wall Street players like BlackRock and Goldman Sachs are entering with real cash, and they can complete arbitrage with supercomputers in 0.0001 seconds. The speed of ordinary retail investors' orders is like an old cow pulling a broken cart in front of machines. Last year's data was shocking; 76% of people couldn't even keep up with Bitcoin's gains, and 7 out of 10 who entered the market ended up as fodder.

Now countries are starting to set rules. The U.S. requires new coins to publish the top 100 holders' lists, and it turns out that 90% of the coins are held by 10 big players, clearly preventing others from taking control. Hong Kong has opened legitimate casinos, with licensed exchanges like HashKey trading 50 billion daily, but only about a hundred seasoned players can handle it.

If you want to enter the market now, you need to have a strategy.
Money should be divided into three parts: 70% for buying hard currencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum, 20% for betting on new things like DeFi and the metaverse, and the remaining 10% for safety. If you see big holders collectively dumping their assets, run quickly and use monitoring tools like Nansen to keep an eye on on-chain activities, just like watching major funds in stock trading.

Now earning money relies on real skills.
Either learn to use robots for quantitative trading to seize cross-chain arbitrage opportunities, or honestly do dollar-cost averaging, buying a fixed amount of Bitcoin every month regardless of price fluctuations, just like paying a mortgage; at the very least, keep your coins in a cold wallet and don't leave them on exchanges like sheep waiting to be slaughtered.

Remember three survival rules:

  1. Don’t go against the policies; although the fees on licensed platforms in Hong Kong are a bit high, it's better than going to jail.

  2. Treat yourself like a professional player; learning to read on-chain data is more important than knowing how to read K-lines.

  3. 80% of funds should seek stability, while 20% should be set aside for risks, just like eating until 80% full and leaving 20% of your stomach for soup.

This circle has always been about smart people making money off the confused. It used to be about who got information first, now it's about who can calculate better. Improving your understanding is like getting a driver's license; without a license, you're bound to crash sooner or later.

Instead of stumbling around in the dark alone, why not grab onto the wings of the strong, let their experience pave the way for you, and let their vision help you break through the ceiling!

$BTC

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