The real "hidden costs" in trading often lurk in the very second of execution: insufficient market depth leads to slippage, excessively long entry paths cause losses, and unstable confirmation results in missed opportunities. You might think you're profiting from volatility, but in reality, much of your profit is quietly eroded during execution. Being right in the direction but not making money is often not due to poor judgment, but rather poor execution quality.
A more practical trading perspective is to treat the environment as part of your strategy: First, select trading pairs and pools with stable market depth and clear entry paths; then, use phased actions to control impact costs; finally, record execution deviations for review, continuously filtering for scenarios more suitable for long-term trading. Trading isn't about being as frequent as possible, but about being as controllable as possible.
If you frequently rotate your portfolio, it's recommended to establish three execution disciplines: limit single-trade moves to avoid immediate slippage; enter and exit in batches to reduce the probability of hitting extreme price points; and record deviations for each trade, consistently eliminating "active but poorly executed" pools. Refining these details will significantly reduce unnecessary losses and allow you to retain more profits.
@JustinSun #TronEcoStars @sunwukong_dex




