Many people believe that the success or failure of trading lies in prediction, but the bigger difference lies in execution: insufficient market depth allows slippage to eat up profits, excessively long trading paths create layers of friction, and unstable confirmation can cause you to miss crucial windows. Even when the direction is right, failing to profit is often due to these "hidden costs" quietly deducting points. The more robust your trading environment, the better you can execute your strategy according to plan, rather than leaving the outcome to luck.
To determine if a trading scenario is suitable for long-term operation, consider three perspectives: First, is the market depth consistent, not just focusing on a single moment of excitement; second, is price fluctuation controllable, especially when your position size increases; third, is the interaction stable, avoiding getting stuck during volatility. Understanding these indicators makes it easier to identify truly sustainable trading environments.
To make trading more stable, consider standardizing your actions: enter and exit in batches, limit single-trade impacts, and record deviations for each trade for review. Minimize noise and hone your execution; you'll find that "stable, high-quality execution" itself brings additional profits, rather than relying solely on emotional chasing of trends.
@JustinSun #TronEcoStars @sunwukong_dex