You ever notice how the worst market advice usually comes from that one person who made quick gains once? They caught a lucky trade, rode a bull run, and suddenly they're convinced they cracked some genius strategy. That's survivor bias at its finest. They ignore all the losses, the bad timing, the times they got wrecked. But memory conveniently glosses over those. What sticks is the win. So now they preach their "formula" like it's guaranteed, and everyone listening buys the narrative without realizing they're hearing from someone who got fortunate, not someone who actually understands risk management or market mechanics. The real players? They stay quiet about their wins and obsess over what went wrong.
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HashRatePhilosopher
· 12-27 03:52
Survivor bias is really something else. As soon as they make a profit, they start teaching others how to trade cryptocurrencies. It's hilarious.
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GateUser-e87b21ee
· 12-27 03:46
NGL, the ones who boast about making a quick profit and then go around preaching are the most annoying. Survivor bias kills people... Those who truly understand have already kept quiet.
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WagmiOrRekt
· 12-27 03:44
ngl Those who made a quick profit and then come out to boast are really ridiculous, acting like luck is a skill, and the funniest part is that some people actually believe it.
You ever notice how the worst market advice usually comes from that one person who made quick gains once? They caught a lucky trade, rode a bull run, and suddenly they're convinced they cracked some genius strategy. That's survivor bias at its finest. They ignore all the losses, the bad timing, the times they got wrecked. But memory conveniently glosses over those. What sticks is the win. So now they preach their "formula" like it's guaranteed, and everyone listening buys the narrative without realizing they're hearing from someone who got fortunate, not someone who actually understands risk management or market mechanics. The real players? They stay quiet about their wins and obsess over what went wrong.