DON'T GUESS the Market.
You’re operating in a world of probabilities and uncertainty, which means that most trades will initially move against you. Because of that, your focus should be on the size of your capital, avoiding excessive leverage, and dividing your capital within each trade.
Here’s my example.
I entered a long position
$DOGE at 0.09160, using 10% of the capital allocated to that trade, with 15x leverage. On the 4-hour chart, I identified key support levels and placed additional orders, each sized at around 15% of the capital allocated to the trade. It's needed in case the price drops — which it did. This approach allows me to build the position, improve my average entry, and, when the market eventually reverses, aim for returns in the range of 50% to 300% of the capital used in the trade.
My entries: 0.0904; 0.08845; 0.8599
Now, about the risks.
We all know - the market has no bottom. A drop can be sharp enough to invalidate your entire position. We’ve seen that happen, for example, on October 10 and February 6. But if you think in terms of probability, this is not something that happens every time. Most of the time, price movements stay within a more predictable range, and your job is simply to manage your capital correctly and add to your position at the right moments during the pullback.
#TradingSignal #Dogecoin $DOGE