📌 Averaging: when it makes sense... and when it DOESN'T
Currency:
$币安人生 USDT (Perp)
This trade is a good example of why averaging is not a magical solution, but a tool that only works in the right context.
📉 Initial context
-The currency was ranging with slight bullish momentum
-Correct entries, but profit didn't exceed 8–10%
-There was no clear impulse yet justifying holding longer
📊 First mistake (lesson learned)
-On the first marked drop, I averaged
-Averaging happened too early, barely at the start of the bearish impulse
-It wasn't that the market was against us; it was a bad entry and poor timing
📉 Second averaging (well executed)
-A rapid spike occurs
-Averaging this time with purpose:
*Price already below multiple EMAs
*Extended impulse
*Context suitable for a technical pullback
📈 Exit
-Within a 3-minute timeframe, the price touches the EMA 9
-Histogram turns
-Close with +1 USDT profit
-Clean trade, no further battle with the market
📌 Key takeaways 👉 The goal of averaging is NOT:
-To hold on waiting for a "rebound"
-To fight against the trend
👉 The real goal of averaging is:
-To exit on a pullback when the initial entry was poor
-To improve the price only if there are clear signals of reversal or exhaustion
💡 Final reflection Not every trade needs to be big. Not every exit needs to be perfect.
📈 1 dollar in well-managed profit, repeated many times, builds powerful portfolios.
The market doesn't reward blind patience,
it rewards reading the market, timing, and knowing when to exit.
Keep going. 📊🔥
@Yorton Luces @69 Teka Crypto #TekaCueva #TekaCuevaInc @Satoshi_Manimoto