Many people understand trading as "finding a hot trend and jumping in," but what truly leads to long-term, stable returns is treating trading as an execution system: input is opportunity identification, output is reviewable trading results. The more frequently you rotate positions, the more you'll feel the difference—whether the path is clear, whether the execution is stable, whether slippage is controllable, and whether you can execute actions promptly within volatility windows. Trading isn't about who can predict better, but about who can execute their plan better.
A more professional observation method is to treat "depth" as the primary indicator: depth determines whether you can complete position rebalancing at a reasonable cost; secondly, look at price impacts, especially the execution offset during large position rebalancings; thirdly, look at confirmation and interaction efficiency to avoid being stuck when the market changes rapidly. Many people overlook these details, often ending up with the embarrassing result of "being right but not making money."
If you want your trading to be more stable, consider establishing a simple process: First, define the scenario (rotation, hedging, take profit, stop loss); then define the actions (entering and exiting in batches, limiting single-trade impact, recording execution deviations); finally, regularly review your trades to eliminate unsuitable trading pairs and time periods. Filtering out noise and refining execution will yield more reliable results than chasing trends.
@JustinSun #TronEcoStars @sunwukong_dex