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Click the trading widget in Gate Square content, complete a transaction, and take home 50 GT, Position Experience Vouchers, or exclusive Spring Festival merchandise.
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Enter Gate Square daily and click any trading pair or trading card within the content to complete a transaction. The top 10 users by trading volume will win GT, Gate merchandise boxes, position experience vouchers, and more.
The top prize: 50 GT.
. These coins often have little actual value and rely on speculative hype for a short-term surge. Once the promoters exit, the prices can plummet rapidly, and it is common for those who chased the highs to lose 80%-90%.
Some people complain that mainstream coins are rising slowly, ignoring Bitcoin and Ethereum to invest in small altcoins, but when the small altcoins drop, the mainstream coins are still rising, resulting in missing out on both.
4. Take profit and stop loss are not in place
- Hesitation to take profits: Buying a coin at 10 dollars and it rises to 20 dollars, having made a double profit but greedily waiting for a higher point, ultimately it retraces to 8 dollars, turning profits into losses.
- Improper stop-loss: either set the stop-loss point too close (for example, sell if it drops by 5%), getting washed out by normal fluctuations; or simply not set a stop-loss, leading to expanded losses and an unwillingness to cut losses, resulting in deeper entrapment.
5. Frequent trading depletes the principal.
Some people think that there are many opportunities during a bull run, frequently trading all day long, but they overlook the accumulation of transaction fees. For example, with a fee of 0.1% each time and trading 10 times a day, the total fees in a year can exceed three times the principal. Worse yet, frequent trading is prone to mistakes; making a little profit can lead to losing everything due to a single error, ultimately resulting in a net loss.
6. Market chaos is hard to prevent.
- Manipulation by market makers: Market makers buy in at low prices, then push the price up to attract retail investors to follow suit, and finally sell at high positions, leading to a price crash, with retail investors left holding the bag.
- Misinformation: The project team spreads false good news (such as "coming to a major exchange"), influential figures hype it up, retail investors buy in at high prices, then the news falls through and the price plummets.
VII. Psychological factors magnify mistakes
In a bull run, greed and fear are magnified infinitely:
- Greedy people always think about selling at the highest point, missing the opportunity to take profits, turning gains into losses.
- Those who are fearful hesitate to buy at first, but when they see the price surge, they panic and enter at a high point without discretion, only to encounter a pullback right after buying, getting directly trapped.
It can be seen that making money during a bull run is not an easy task. Choosing the right coins, managing positions well, being cautious with leverage, setting profit-taking and stop-loss orders, reducing ineffective trades, and being wary of false information are all necessary to have a chance to profit. If these are not done well, a bull run can still lead to significant losses.