🚨 I don’t try to guess the market. I let the market come to me.
Today I decided to open two staggered buy orders on BEATUSDT.
Many traders make the mistake of investing all their capital in a single entry. I prefer to split my investment because the market can keep dropping before it recovers.
By doing this: ✅ I improve my average entry price. ✅ I avoid committing all my capital to a single level. ✅ I manage risk better and stay calm if the price keeps correcting.
My analysis is based on the fact that BEATUSDT is trading near historically low levels. That doesn’t mean the price will go up immediately, but it does represent an area I find interesting for looking for an opportunity.
Will I make money? I don’t know.
No one can guarantee how the market will behave, and anyone who says they can probably isn’t being honest.
What I can do is share my trades before the outcome, show my analysis, and in the end, explain how the trade turned out—either with gains or losses.
That’s the kind of content you’ll find on my profile: real experiences, risk management, and continuous learning, without selling fake promises.
📈 Do you also use staggered entries, or do you prefer to go in with everything in a single order? I’d love to hear from you in the comments.
My analysis is based on the fact that $BEAT is trading close to and even below some of its historical prices. For that reason, I decided to place two staggered buy orders, looking to take advantage of a possible rebound and earn a small profit margin.
Am I going to win? I don’t know. No one can guarantee how the market will behave.
What I can do is show my strategy and share the result, whether it’s a gain or a loss. That’s the difference between creating content with transparency and selling false promises.
If you trade in futures, always use the Stop Loss to your advantage. 📈
When your trade is already in profit, move the Stop Loss to the entry price or slightly above it. That way, if the market turns around, you’ll close the trade without losses or even with a small gain.
This eliminates a large part of the risk and lets the price run to take advantage of a bigger move.
Today I leave this new challenge in $VELVET ; I’ve decided to leave it for 30 days on Futures, a 9 USD investment, so that once we reach our goal, we’ll see each other on day 30 and how much profit we make—or maybe we lose it.
Big goals aren’t achieved overnight. They’re built with consistency.
Five years ago, I started my journey on Binance with no experience. I made mistakes, lost money, and learned lessons that no book can teach. Instead of giving up, I decided to keep learning and share that knowledge with other people.
Today I have a new dream: to get verified on Binance Square. To achieve it, I need to grow this community, and every new follower represents another step toward that goal.
I won’t promise you quick profits or magic formulas. What I can promise you is content based on real experiences, advice for beginners, mistakes you should avoid, and everything I’m learning in this world of cryptocurrencies.
If any of my posts has helped you, I invite you to follow me and be part of this community. Your support means much more than a number; it means this project keeps growing.
Thank you for believing in this dream. Step by step. Today we’re just a few, but with effort and consistency we’ll go very far. 🚀💛
Many people ask me for trading advice. My answer is always the same: build your own judgment. In trading, there is no scientific formula that guarantees winning; if there were, everyone would be millionaires. I prefer to wait for extreme moves: when the market panics and reaches low zones, I look for buy opportunities. When it reaches euphoria zones and highs, I analyze possible selling. I don’t chase the price; I wait for the market to come to me. This is not investment advice; it’s simply the way I trade
Many believe that in the future only the price determines whether you win or lose.
Today Binance let me know that, if I keep my position open, I will pay 1.80 USDT in Funding Fee.
📌 Moral: before leaving a trade open for hours or days, always check the Funding Rate. A good entry also involves controlling the costs of holding the position.
I opened a position and didn't set either Take Profit or Stop Loss. I ended up watching the chart for more than 8 hours.
In the end, I only made 4.30 USDT.
Was it worth it? For me, no.
Today the lesson is clear: trading isn't about spending the whole night staring at the screen, but about managing risk and having a plan before you enter.