The most real difference in trading isn't your chart reading skills, but your ability to execute trades effectively. Insufficient depth leads to slippage, excessively long entry and exit paths result in accumulated losses, and unstable confirmation causes missed opportunities. Many people think they made a mistake in their judgment, but in reality, execution costs swallowed up profits.
A more professional approach is to treat trading like an engineering project: first, select trading pairs and pools with stable depth and consistent liquidity; then, use phased execution to control impact costs; finally, record execution deviations for review, continuously optimizing the path and timing. The purpose of reviewing is not to find excuses, but to reduce future friction, making the strategy more like a compounding machine rather than emotional gambling.
If you frequently rotate your portfolio, establish three rules for yourself: limit single-trade impacts to avoid being wiped out by slippage, enter and exit in batches to reduce the probability of hitting extreme points, and consistently eliminate poorly executed pools based on execution deviations. Refining these details will significantly reduce unnecessary losses and allow you to retain more profits.
@JustinSun #TronEcoStars @sunwukong_dex