A few days ago, the market was fluctuating around the 3.5B range, and many people have already started to implement hedging strategies. My personal approach is as follows—if the price subsequently falls below 2.5, I will gradually close existing hedge positions in batches to lock in risk. And once an extreme dip below 2 occurs, I will consider moderately taking on some reverse positions. This price gradient division is mainly based on the strength of support levels. Overall, in such sideways trading conditions, risk control is more important than blind trading.
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OnchainDetectiveBing
· 7h ago
3.5 is really a dilemma, I think 2.5 is the true acid test.
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CafeMinor
· 7h ago
3.5B has been fluctuating for so long, it was about time to take action.
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Clear closing logic, just afraid that if 2.5 breaks, it will continue to drop.
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Only buy the dip during extreme dips? Brother, you really have guts.
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Sideways trading is the most torturous; not taking action now is the real action.
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It's easy to say that support levels are judged correctly, but in actual operation, who isn’t just sleepwalking?
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Everyone understands the importance of risk control, but few actually execute it.
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Those who dare to buy below 2 are true men.
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If you follow your gradient operation in this wave, you'll definitely regret one step later.
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SchrodingerWallet
· 7h ago
3.5 has been oscillating for so long, are you still waiting for a breakdown? I think 2.5 is the real point to take action.
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ContractBugHunter
· 7h ago
Your hedging strategy sounds good, but I always feel a bit uneasy about the 3.5 level.
Waiting until it drops below 2 to act? That's too conservative.
Support levels are easy to talk about but hard to implement.
Is the 2.5 line really reliable? I don't believe it.
Sideways trading is the most annoying; there's nothing you can do.
A few days ago, the market was fluctuating around the 3.5B range, and many people have already started to implement hedging strategies. My personal approach is as follows—if the price subsequently falls below 2.5, I will gradually close existing hedge positions in batches to lock in risk. And once an extreme dip below 2 occurs, I will consider moderately taking on some reverse positions. This price gradient division is mainly based on the strength of support levels. Overall, in such sideways trading conditions, risk control is more important than blind trading.