Trends Are Not Technique, Trends Are Group Sentiment



Why can't most people make money in major market moves? The strangest thing about markets is: in small moves, everyone is trading. In major moves, many people have already left the game. Of course, I used to be like that too. When a trend just started, I didn't dare go all-in. I always felt it wasn't confirmed yet. Once the trend took shape and I finally entered, one pullback would shake me out. Later the market continued, but I was no longer on board. That's when I slowly understood: many people don't fail to see trends. They fail to hold them. Economics has a concept: short-term fluctuations. Markets oscillate constantly even within trends. But the moment people see a pullback, they instinctively panic. Because the human brain is extremely sensitive to losses. So many traders would rather make small money than endure pullbacks. Zhuangzi once said: "You cannot talk about ice to a summer insect." Many people who haven't experienced a trend find it hard to understand one. Trends actually aren't technique. Trends are group sentiment. When more and more people start believing in one direction, prices will continue to move far.

A few reminders:
1) Real major moves often start very ordinarily.
2) Oscillations in trends aren't danger, they're the norm.
3) If every pullback makes you want to leave, your position is too large.
4) Big money doesn't come from prediction, it comes from holding. When Livermore made his biggest money back then, it wasn't because he predicted the market. It was because he sat through the trend. He said something very simple: big money is made by sitting and waiting.

Have you experienced this? The market moved far, but you only made money on the very beginning part? #加密市场上涨 $ETH #Gate广场AI测评官 #比特币站上七万美元
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