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Short position trapped? Most people's first reactions are two: either hold on stubbornly or cut losses directly.
To be blunt, both moves are purely emotional and have nothing to do with market analysis.
I've heard this so many times it makes my ears bleed, yet it's the most deadly mistake.
The biggest taboo in trading is using the outcome to reverse‑engineer your original decision — if it drops back, you say you should have held; if it rallies, you say you should have cut. Pure rear‑view mirror driving. But you never know whether holding one more day will bring you back to breakeven or a full blowout.
At the end of the day, the problem isn't “whether the trend has reversed.” It's that before you entered, you never thought about “what to do if I'm wrong”: no stop‑loss, no contingency plan.
$SPCX
Besides holding on and cutting losses, there's actually a third way to survive: first nail down the risk so you can catch your breath.
For example, hedge with an equal position to temporarily lock in the loss and stop the bleeding from your account, then wait for the market to show a clear direction before deciding which side to keep.
The point isn't that “hedging is always right,” but that it buys you room to reassess without making decisions when emotions are running high.
$VELVET
Many people lose money not because they got the direction wrong, but because they kept stubbornly holding after being wrong, only giving up when they couldn't take it anymore — by then it's already too late.
Trading isn't just about on and off; it's also about pause and correction.
The ones who survive are never those who bet correctly every time, but those who, after each wrong bet, can cap the loss and not act recklessly. It's that simple.
#美光市值超越Meta跻身全美前十