can we move this price down a little faster I am waiting to rebuy all my digibyte! My wallets feel naked without it!
haha, I am in the same position as you
I want to buy some more also. Had too low a buy price the other day.
Was going up too fast for me... I tried saying that but nobody was listening just pushing away lol.... I took my 5-6x profits and now I will wait for a reload... I LOVE digibyte probably my favorite coin but why wouldn't I sell and buy back MORE digibyte... Isn't that the goal... Own MORE digibyte
Of course you're right from a short-term trader's perspective. And, I don't have anything against traders. I am one. But, I'm also an investor. And, from a long-term investor's perspective it's a bit different. Clearly you were not the only person to take profits and hope for a decline. But, the danger to taking profits from short-term positions is that you end up on the wrong side of the price, which is the worst place to be for any trade.
A few years ago I sold out of a stock position for about $25/share. I had bought it a couple of months before at about $15/share. Over the previous 12-months the stock was averaging highs around $20 and lows around $14. So, I figured taking profits at $25 and waiting from the price to return to the teens was a good choice (exactly what you describe above). However, the price kept running up. I was on the wrong side of the price and I was faced with a problem. Do I buy back in at a lower number of shares? Do I short the stock? Do I wait (and just hold the cash)? Should I tie up my money in a different instrument while I wait? I decided to just move on. Today, the stock trades around $70 a share and I don't own any shares.
So. Back to your statement. Sure. I agree. But, I also think that we've been in a bit of a bear trap over the past 10 days. People who sold substantial positions in DGB in the mid-80s - but who also want to buy back in - also have an active interest in seeing the price decline so they don't end up on the wrong side of the price. We don't have margins or futures (except with some BTC exchanges), so on the spot market exchanges it's pretty straightforward; all you have to do is put in more sell orders to increase the sell volume (it doesn't even really matter if they're filled), the price will go down, and you can buy back in. But, from an investment perspective, it's not about the value of DGB, it perpetuates volatility and hurts long-term adoption and use, it's just the digital currency version of shorting. It seems most of the DGB bears will get out of this trap. I guess we'll see about future ones.