Things I Wish I Knew Before Starting Crypto Trading


Crypto Trading. It brings with it some of the highest highs when you ride a rocket to the moon and the lowest lows when you watch your portfolio bleed.


What I’d like to provide to you today, are some things I wish I had known when I first got started, to hopefully shed some light about the trading world and maybe, just maybe, save you from some of the things I learned the hard way.

 

1) What kind of trader are you?


What the hell am I doing?

This is a question of self-reflection. You need to honestly look within yourself and determine what kind of trader you want to be. A lot of people fantasize about the Hollywood day-traders and the huge scores they make. Honestly, Day-trading is extremely stressful, and you can find yourself losing your money fast if you do not have time to babysit the market and especially if you do not know what you are doing.

There are three different types of traders:

· Day Trader (you make a daily trade or more),

· Swing Trader (you make a trade every 2–7 days, sometimes longer if that is what the trend requires).

· Investor (buys the dips, holds long term).

All three types are valid ways to make money but require different strategies. You may find yourself as a blend of these.

Personally, I fall into the Swing Trader and Investor category.

It is ok to not make a trade daily. Sometimes the best trade is one not made. Over trading is one of the most common mistakes of new traders. Let the trade come to you and know what you are getting yourself into. If you cannot answer why you made that trade, you are literally gambling.

 

2) Market Psychology is extremely powerful.

Technical Analysis (TA) is a powerful tool that can help you make educated decisions, but know right away, it is not a crystal ball.


Aw yeah. $DOGE is heading to the moon.

I’d like to point out that FUD (Fear, Uncertainty, Doubt) and FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) are extremely powerful and even the most textbook chart can be broken causing a Black Swan event. Always practice risk management and utilize stop losses.

Understand too what an echo chamber is. If you drop yourself into a coin’s official Telegram channel or are speaking to the guy named “(insert coin here) Whale” they have a personal stake in wanting that coin to go up. I was burned when I first started trading by this when I would hear vast numbers of people in a group for a coin saying “This coin is going to $1 USD!” When you see enough people yelling it, it reinforces it in your mind and you start to believe it. FOMO starts to kick in. With that, learn how to calculate a coin’s price. It isn’t that hard. Which leads into:

 

3) How to calculate a coin’s price.

So DigitByte ($DGB), is the coin I mentioned before that I was burned on. I was told it would be “$1 USD by the end of the year!” I did not know how coin’s prices were calculated, or how market caps worked and blindly threw my money in at the top of its market cycle. I paid dearly for this.

<figure id="af37" class="graf graf--figure graf-after--p">


It'll be $1 soon. Right? Please? My famalie...
</figure>

Look at the price in the above screenshot. This is calculated by the over all market cap ($563,193,234) divided by the circulating supply (9,739,480,205 DGB). This comes out to the price we see above. You can find all of the coin market caps here.

This means, for $DGB to be $1 USD, you would need a $9,739,480,205 USD market cap for that to happen. Is that realistic for your coin of choice? Ensure you fully understand the potential of the coin you are involved with and set realistic expectations.

 

4) Beware of Twitter, your best friend and worst enemy.


I mean come on, it's the internet

Twitter can be a wonderful source of information as well as a terrible one.Keep in mind, 99.9% of people who are posting charts on twitter have already placed their positions, made their buys, and are now attempting to influence the market into the direction they desire. That guy who showed you (insert coin here) is going to moonshot? They’ve already bought in and if they’re in a group, informed them too.

Question everything. What indicators did that person use to come to that conclusion? Don’t know what that particular indicator is? Ask. Then look it up. Research it. Type that topic in Google followed with “Investopedia”. That’s what I do still even today. I won’t attempt to teach you TA because there are many people who have already prepared those lessons better than I could. See CryptoCred’s free crypto lessons here to get started on the right path.

Do your own research. (DYOR) That guy who just told you the market is going to the moon; do you even know who they are? How long have they been trading? Most twitter traders are a cartoon avatar. You have no clue who they are. Can you look your friends in the face and say, “I bought this coin because a Doge in a Navy Uniform named Potato McGruff said so.”? The number of followers someone has does not equal level of credibility or experience.


Good looking, but not a licensed adviser.

It’s ok to ask questions! Most twitter personalities would be happy to point you in the right direction or explain their charts if you’re asking “how” and not “Target Sir?” I ignore target questions completely because for starters, I am not a licensed financial adviser and at the end of the day, I don’t want to see the torches and pitchforks when I am wrong. Guess what. I do not have a 100% success rate and have been rekt plenty of times. Anyone who claims they haven’t been rekt are liars, and anyone who thinks they are immune to being rekt are fools.


"TaRgEt SiR?"

 

5) General Tips.

Slow down. There will always be another rocket if you missed it. Breathe. On the other side, that coin you bought is now bleeding, is the team legitimate and does the coin have a real use? It will likely come back in time if you’re holding it. There are exceptions, but overall, holding through storms isn’t a bad option. I also started making more when I found great positions on coins, bought and held until they had their day. $DOGE was an example of this when I bought it at 15–17 sats and held it for about 3 months before selling it 100+ sats. Chasing pumps will bleed you dry. If you have a good position on a coin, you will worry much less.

<figure id="e207" class="graf graf--figure graf-after--p">


Average day of trading in crypto.
</figure>

Having altcoins is NOT the same as having BTC. Is your goal to get more BTC or to invest in a specific coin? Keep that in mind when building your portfolio. If your goal is to gain more BTC, be careful of becoming too loyal to a coin.

Bitcoin is King. Always keep an eye on BTC. It will destroy your alt parties very quickly if you’re not watching.


Invest in a hard-wallet. Get your long-term, non-trading coins off the exchange. How are you going to feel if that exchange suddenly shuts down and all those coins are lost?

USE TWO-FACTOR AUTHENTICATION and not SMS, but a device based authenticator (like Google Authenticator). SMS Authentication has been hacked before. This is your best defense at stopping your account from getting compromised. Use different passwords for different exchanges. Yes, it may be a pain, but would you rather lose your coins?

Use bookmarks for exchange sites. Go to the site and bookmark it. Use this instead of Googling for it. Phishing sites have been found spoofing exchangesand paying for ads to push them to the top of Google results.

6) Never trade alone.

When trading alone, you do not have the luxury of bouncing questions, charts, and lessons learned off each other. Some people have negative cogitations about paid groups while others praise them to the moon. If you are going to join a paid group, I highly recommend you do with a group that is education based and not a signals group. You need to learn how to properly read these markets and protect your own interests. What are you going to do if that group shuts down? At the end of the day, you’re going to pay one way or the other. You can pay a group to learn, pay the markets in mistakes and through personal experience, or a little of both. Personally, when I got started, I signed up with a paid group to learn and don’t regret it for a moment. I wouldn’t be where I am today if I hadn’t done so.

Even if you do not decide to join a paid education group, join one of the many free groups out there, but again, beware of the echo chambers and pump groups. A paid group usually cuts the noise down and you’ll find more serious traders/investors.


Find your pack.

Conclusion

Patience is key in crypto trading and there are a lot of moving parts. Do not be afraid to miss a trade as this environment is so rich with opportunities to make money. Keep in mind, it is easy to make money in this market but much harder to keep it. Any open trade is not yours. Do not let greed drive you and slowly sell out of your position as it moons. Again, there will always be another rocket to catch! You can follow me and my future posts on Twitter here.

 


Buckle up! It's a wild ride!

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interesting post. i'm not a trader but the more i've been on steemit the more interested i am in crypto and investing. perhaps in the future ill give it a try. thanks

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