Investing in small positions during a bear market is actually quite cost-effective—want to buy the dip but afraid of chasing the high? Instead of struggling with timing the market, it's better to regularly invest a small amount of money. As long as you stay committed to participating, you can add more when a major decline occurs. The amount of money doesn't matter; the key is to have the discipline to execute. Mainstream cryptocurrencies like BTC and ETH can serve as the core of your portfolio, while other popular coins can be appropriately allocated based on your risk tolerance.

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ETH-3.7%
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P2ENotWorkingvip
· 01-07 05:53
I'm tired of hearing the same thing about dollar-cost averaging; the real challenge is being able to hold on and endure every dip. Most people have already cut their losses.
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ColdWalletAnxietyvip
· 01-07 05:46
It's easy to say, but execution is the real devil. You have to persist and resist the urge to chase highs—it's a real test of human nature.
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DaoGovernanceOfficervip
· 01-07 05:44
*sigh* empirically speaking, this is just dollar-cost averaging with extra steps. the data suggests most people lack the discipline to execute anyway—execution bias is real, not some personality trait. btw, has anyone actually modeled the opportunity cost here against quadratic funding mechanisms? just saying, there's research on this.
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