1. Position: The ratio of the principal invested in the platform to the actual funds used to purchase currency pairs.
2. Full Position: All funds in the platform are invested in digital assets.
3. Reducing Position: Selling part of the digital currency but not selling all of it.
4. Light Position: A small portion of funds is used to purchase digital currencies, leaving a large amount of funds available.
5. Heavy Position: A large portion of assets is used to purchase digital currencies, with only a small amount of funds available.
6. No Position: All digital currency assets have been sold, or no digital currencies have been purchased.
7. Building Position: The act of buying digital currencies.
8. Averaging Down: Buying digital currencies multiple times, for example, when the price drops, to lower the average holding cost. 9. Stop Loss: Selling digital currencies when the price falls below the purchase cost to prevent further losses.
10. Take Profit: Selling digital currencies when the price exceeds the purchase price and reaches a certain profit, thereby realizing actual gains.
11. Rebound: Digital currencies fall too quickly, resulting in a short-term increase, generally indicating that a rebound follows a significant drop.
12. Consolidation: The market has no significant fluctuations, and the price of digital currencies remains stable.
13. Waterfall: Also known as a plunge, the price of digital currencies suddenly drops. 14. Slow Decline: Refers to the slow decrease in the price of digital currencies. 15. Floating Loss: A floating loss does not equal a real loss. When the price of the currency falls below the purchase cost, a floating loss occurs. A floating loss is a temporary loss, and only after selling will a real loss occur.
16. Cutting Losses: When the price of purchased digital currencies falls, resulting in a floating loss, selling to avoid a larger floating loss is called cutting losses.
17. Trapped: Opposite to the expected direction. Expecting the price of digital currencies to rise, it falls after buying; expecting the price to fall, it rises after selling.
18. Unwinding: Buying digital currencies, and after the price drops and a floating loss occurs, waiting for the price to rise above the purchase cost to unwind.
19. Missing the Opportunity: The market situation is unclear. After selling digital currencies, the price rises continuously, and failing to buy in time results in missing profits.
20. Oversold: The price of digital currencies continues to fall, and the selling pressure has basically exhausted, reaching the current lowest point, with prices about to rise.
21. Overbought: The price of digital currencies continues to rise, and buying pressure has basically exhausted, reaching the current highest price point, with prices about to fall.
22. Going Long: Also known as bullish, buyers believe that digital currencies will rise in the future, buying in, waiting for the asset price to rise, and selling at a high price to obtain profits.
23. Going Short: Also known as bearish, sellers believe that digital assets will fall, selling the currencies they hold or borrowed, and buying back at a lower price after the price drops to gain profits.
24. Pumping: Digital currency has been consolidating for a long time, and the possibility of a market decline is relatively high. Most short sellers have already sold their digital currencies. Suddenly, the bears raise the price, enticing the bulls to think that the price will continue to rise, causing them to buy in, only to be trapped as the bears push the price down.
23. Going Short: Also known as bearish, sellers believe that digital assets will fall, selling the currencies they hold or borrowed, and buying back at a lower price after the price drops to gain profits.
24. Pumping: Digital currency has been consolidating for a long time, and the possibility of a market decline is relatively high. Most short sellers have already sold their digital currencies. Suddenly, the bears raise the price, enticing the bulls to think that the price will continue to rise, causing them to buy in, only to be trapped as the bears push the price down.
25. Pumping: After the bulls buy digital currencies, they deliberately suppress the price, making the bears think that the price will continue to fall, leading everyone to short. As a result, the price rises again.
26. Bull Market: The market sentiment is optimistic, and the price of digital currencies continues to rise.
27. Bear Market: The market outlook is pessimistic, and the price of digital currencies continues to decline.