Why are commissions consuming you so much? ✅🤫LET ME explain 🎯
I will explain it to you simply 🤔
Every time you close an open trade, you create a closing order, which for you to better understand, someone has to buy your closing order.
✅If you trade high-cap coins, there are orders everywhere, so if you decide to close at any moment, it is more than certain that someone will buy your sell order and the commission will be low, practically just the broker's commission regarding the leverage used (a x75 trade with an amount of about 1200usdt will take about 0.35 in commission on average).
❌If you trade low-cap coins, and decide to close your operation: 🎯Example 1. You close in X coin at 150, but the nearest closing order is at 140... The broker will charge you the commission based on your leverage and in addition to that, they will charge you as if you had closed at 140... you are losing 10 pips bro.
🎯There is another special scenario here on Binance, which is when you close a trade and Binance recognizes it as an "emergency" close (you open a trade and the coin has a lot of volatility, so you close it almost automatically; it can also happen that your trade has been open for a long time and suddenly it drops sharply and you close at 150... Boom, they hit you with an additional commission for "supposed emergency close").
Moral... Trade coins with a solid base if you don’t want to be eaten up ✅✅
Why are crypto and stock markets crashing so hard today?
Why are crypto and stock markets crashing so hard today? Markets are in free fall. Over the past two months, the S&P 500 and crypto have lost a staggering $5.5 trillion in market value. That’s an insane amount of money gone in record time. The sell-off has been so brutal that sentiment has flipped from Extreme Greed to Extreme Fear practically overnight. The S&P 500 has erased $4.5 trillion since February 20th alone. That’s $350 billion per day for 13 straight days. The Nasdaq is now 8% away from bear market territory, something it hasn’t seen since 2022. Meanwhile, crypto has been completely wrecked, crashing $1.3 trillion in market cap since its peak on December 16th. That’s a 33% drop in just three months, an average of $15.5 billion lost every single day for 84 days straight. Big money is pulling out first The trade war is being blamed for this collapse, but that’s not the full story. Institutional investors started bailing long before the drop even began. Heading into 2025, hedge fund exposure to Magnificent 7 stocks hit a 22-month low. That means the biggest players on Wall Street started reducing their risk before the crash happened, leaving retail investors to hold the bag. On February 9th, institutional investors built the largest Ethereum short position in history. At the same time, retail traders were diving headfirst into crypto, fueled by optimism over the US Strategic Reserve. That didn’t end well. Even when the US Bitcoin Reserve was confirmed, the market sold off instead of rallying, turning it into a classic sell-the-news event. The shift in risk sentiment has been so extreme that even firms like Apollo—who just two months ago predicted a 0% chance of a US recession—are now scrambling to adjust their outlook. Fear is completely taking over. The outflows are breaking records Money is fleeing every corner of the market. Crypto funds alone lost $2.6 billion last week, the biggest weekly outflow ever recorded. That’s $500 million more than the previous record set in 2024. The S&P 500 has been hit just as hard. US small-cap stocks saw $3.5 billion in outflows, the most since December 18th. Mid-cap funds lost $2.1 billion, and sectoral funds dumped another $4.5 billion, with $1.9 billion of that coming from tech stocks alone. The Volatility Index (VIX) has shot up over 70% in a single month, signaling that wild price swings are here to stay. Wall Street traders are now preparing for 1,000+ point swings in the Dow to become routine. Tech stocks have taken some of the biggest hits. MicroStrategy has plunged 16%, Tesla is down 14%, and Palantir has fallen 10%. Even big names like Alphabet, Apple, Meta, Nvidia, Amazon, Netflix, and Microsoft have all lost between 4% and 7%. The S&P 500’s $4.5 trillion wipeout has left the Nasdaq 100 just 7% away from bear market territory. Meanwhile, crypto’s $1.3 trillion crash is raising the question: Has the 2025 crypto bear market already begun?
convert everything to usdt, wait for btc to drop to 84 and then buy all the damn bitcoin
Cris Adolfo
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Bullish
I invested around $2,000 two months ago. So far I have lost around $300+. How long do I need to wait to recover the loss and turn $2,000 into $3,000-4,000?