Your strongest strategy is actually very simple: patience.
In the beginning, like most beginners, you probably rushed trades, overtraded, chased moves. But over time you learned the biggest lesson patience is everything.
Now your approach is clear:
You set a daily target.
If that daily target gets achieved in just one trade, you stop. You don’t stay in the market just because it’s moving. You don’t force another setup. You close the laptop and move on.
That discipline alone separates traders from gamblers.
You also made an important point almost every strategy works.
It’s not about “this strategy is bad” or “that indicator doesn’t work.” Most strategies can work.
The real difference is:
• How seriously you take it • How many times you test it • Whether you stick with it long enough
Most people watch a YouTube video, take 4–5 trades. If they lose, they quit. Then they jump to another strategy.
They never test it 100 times. They never track win rate. They never calculate risk-reward properly.
Without proper testing, how can you judge a strategy?
Real traders:
• Backtest it properly • Track wins and losses • Measure risk management • Then decide whether to keep it or adjust it
Success in trading isn’t about finding a “secret strategy.”
It’s about patience, consistency, discipline, and proper testing.
If we look at the fixed 21 million supply of Bitcoin, roughly around 18–22% of it is associated with just a few major entities (including custodians and institutions). So in reality, the distribution isn’t as decentralized as many people think.
At the top is Satoshi Nakamoto. It’s estimated that around 1.0–1.1 million Bitcoin roughly 5% of the total supply belong to Satoshi. These coins have never moved, and Satoshi remains anonymous.
In second place is Coinbase, holding approximately 900,000–1,000,000 Bitcoin in custody. That represents roughly 4–5% of total supply, though these coins belong to users, not the exchange itself.
Third is BlackRock. Through its Bitcoin ETF products, it holds roughly 600,000–750,000 Bitcoin, representing about 3–3.5% of total supply (these are investor assets under management).
Fourth is MicroStrategy, led by Michael Saylor. The company holds approximately 400,000–450,000 Bitcoin, which equals roughly 2–2.2% of total supply making it the largest corporate treasury holder.
Next is the government of the United States, which holds approximately 200,000–220,000 Bitcoin seized through legal cases about 1% of total supply.
The government of China is estimated to hold roughly 190,000 Bitcoin, also close to 1% of supply, although holdings can fluctuate depending on liquidation activity.
When combined, these major holders including custodians, ETFs, corporations, and governments are associated with roughly 18–22% of Bitcoin’s total 21 million supply.
That’s a meaningful concentration, and it plays an important role in understanding Bitcoin’s long-term liquidity, market structure, and price behavior.