The short positions from early morning have been closed. The rebound in the morning reached $15, and according to the usual thinking, it should have continued to short. However, this market player never falls for those old tricks. Instead of following the routine, I prefer to think differently—since the expected direction always seems to hit a snag, why not try the opposite? So I made a small long position, just to test the feasibility of contrarian thinking. This position is purely for experimentation, not expecting to make a big profit, just to see if this reverse operation can avoid the next "market maker trap."
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SellTheBounce
· 01-03 09:38
The reverse operation of this... To put it simply, it's still a gambling house approach. How low can the risk of pitfalls go? History tells us there's always a lower point waiting.
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MEVHunter
· 01-03 07:47
Haha, I understand this reverse operation, it's that kind of logic in the mempool: "Since the strategy has been exposed, then counter-strategy." But to be honest, this kind of thinking has already been fully understood by Zhuangzi. The more you try to counter, the more likely you are to fall into a sandwich trap.
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WhaleWatcher
· 01-03 07:46
This set of reverse thinking sounds good, but I'm afraid that if I keep reversing, I might get confused myself.
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GamefiGreenie
· 01-03 07:23
Ha, you're doing reverse operations again. Gambling houses don't play by the rules. How strong must your mindset be this time?
The short positions from early morning have been closed. The rebound in the morning reached $15, and according to the usual thinking, it should have continued to short. However, this market player never falls for those old tricks. Instead of following the routine, I prefer to think differently—since the expected direction always seems to hit a snag, why not try the opposite? So I made a small long position, just to test the feasibility of contrarian thinking. This position is purely for experimentation, not expecting to make a big profit, just to see if this reverse operation can avoid the next "market maker trap."