Quote: (01-13-2018 04:06 PM)JayJuanGee Wrote:
Quote: (01-13-2018 03:18 PM)Blancpain Wrote:
If you try to time the market especially in volatile environment like Crypto, you will be on the losing side 99.9% of the time in the long run.
People who think they will make a fortune trading this thing are all suckers who will lose in the long run. All it will take is a couple of unlucky trades and going on tilt(if you played poker you will be familiar with this term)
However if you view it as an investment, you might very well make some decent coin. Treat it like an investment. Don't keep looking at the charts. This is coming from someone who has been investing in the stock market since the age of 13 thanks to my dad. I've never seen a day trader from my circle drive a Porsche, but I've seen plenty of buy and hold investors who live the good life. Buy and hold if you believe your investment thesis.
If you jump from one coin to the other it will mess up your psychology and will make you go on tilt mode which will let you make irrational decisions. Stay away from day trading this thing.
I might quibble with you a little bit Blancpain regarding your assertion of don't "day trade" because the concept of "day trading" can be understood in a variety of ways, but I really do agree with your overall framework and specifically with a couple of your points.
First, your assertion that jumping around from coin to coin is likely going to be a loser and also has a decent chance of bringing bad results, is a good concept to keep in mind.
Second, your assertion that there are ways that guys can consider crypto as an investment seems to be a solid one, as well - even though I have seen a large number of others (who I believe are wrong) attempting to simplify the whole concept of crypto into a kind of "speculative" asset with the implication that crypto doesn't have fundamentals. In terms of the concept of investment, there is no one way to structure your investment into crypto that is necessarily going to be right for everyone, even though some ways of structuring will end up being more profitable than others (and then some would seemingly fallaciously argue that those ways were more right merely because they ended up being more financially profitable) . Yet, in the end, there are a large number of ways that guys can structure their "crypto investment", including if their structure includes a kind of day trading that fits their personal circumstances, views, timeline and risk tolerance, and also including concepts of hedging (which is a kind of downside insurance and cross asset insurance). Sometimes such investing into crypto will include frequent reallocations and even a kind of day trading - without necessarily getting caught into a kind of downward spiraling of chasing coins around, which gets back to the problematic nature of the other strong point that you made, don't chase coins
.
It's ok to day trade with maybe 1-2% of your portfolio to kill time, you should treat at as a hobby rather than a job.
Let me put it in a more simpler way, you only need to get lucky once if you want to make money investing (Buy and hold)
To lose, you only have to get unlucky once by day trading.
A well diversified portfolio of say 5 decent crypto will most likely make you money if there is a great bull market for cryptos. However with day trading, its possible to lose money even in a bull market.
If trading was so easy, nearly everyone would be rich trading penny stocks. I think alts in cryptos are the equivalent to penny stocks in the stock market.
Anyway, sticking to traditional investment methods is your best bet IMHO. Diversification,Diversification, Diversification.
Imagine two scenarios, one guy has all his money in ETH, while the other diversified into BTH,ETH,XRP,MNR,LTC
Lets imagine we are the dude #1 holding ETH, while ETH was 300$ you witnessed Bitcoin jump to 19k from 4k
You are like, fuuuck I should have bought BTC, then your pscyhology gets messed up , you start reading reddit, people are saying BTC will hit 100k before 2019, so you sell your eth position and move your money to BTC. What happens this time? BTC drops to 13k, ETH goes up to 1.5k.
You go haywire and go on tilt mode, this time you are taking more risks because thats the way psychology works. You start putting money into coin of the days etc, take more risks. We know what the end result of this is.
But what if you were the second guy and had positions in BTC, and ETH,MNR at the same time? Your portfolio would be more stable, you would sleep easier at night, and price fluctutiations would affect you less.
Never put all your eggs in one basket
My 2 cents.