For example I do agree using signals and automated bots would take the learning curve away. While I still think it is possible to make profits this way (you can check the results of signal sellers on 3commas), these profits would be the result of putting trust in other people and not by getting more skilled myself. That is certainly not the way to go.
Another great tip for me personally comes from Tytanowy Janusz: 'having everything loaded into trades should not be your priority'. This is something I am very guilty of. When I sell a bag, I buy another one within the next hour. I never have BTC for opportunities. When BTC dumped a bit some days ago there were so many ALTS I’ve could have gotten cheap, but I had no BTC left.
I also realised why I HAVE to set stop losses this week. At first I was reluctant because of the following reasons:
- the coins I get in are fundamentally good projects and when you look at ICX and LOOM for example and zoom out on the chart, well, chances you’ll be bagholding a coin like that for many years are small. Worst case scenario it turns into a long term hodl.
- you could end up 'wasting' profits when a stop loss gets triggered and price recovers just as fast. Many times you will see coins dump a little before they pump. Nobody likes being left out that way.
After refusing to set stop losses for a couple of weeks however, I have learned that your funds get tied up pretty quickly and while you will not lose on those trades in the long run, you miss out on much better opportunities short term or you might miss the possibility to re-enter at a lower price. So from now on this is a no brainer to me: losses are not bad, you’re not a failure when you realise them, sometimes they are a necessary evil.
Also, I have to accept that while I have the luxury to do this 16 hours a day for 6 more months, I just don’t have the knowledge to put that time to good use. In fact, spending that much time staring at screens without a solid plan will probably be counterproductive like gantez worded so nicely.
This is one major thing that is now affecting you. If you notice, while you were swinging, you were allowing your trade enough space and not always monitoring. So do the same now that you have decided to day trade. Stop monitoring at short intervals. Set your profit it will get there. Good luck.
I guess my main problem is that I’m still wayy to impatient/insecure. In trading and in life generally. I exptected all this free time to be reflected in my profits. And it kinda did, I actually had a great month, I started with $4400 on March 11th and I’m currently over $6100 with two weeks to go before the month ends. What bothers me about it is I don’t really know how I did it and how to replicate it, fearing that all of this was just dumb luck.
I will probably benefit from taking a step back, taking a deep breath and focus on learning. The question is, where to start? So many different opinions, so many indicators, it’s easy to suffer from information overload and I don’t want to get turned off by that.