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Position: refers to the ratio of an investor's actual investment to actual investment funds.
Full position: Use all funds to buy virtual currency.
Reduce positions: sell some virtual currencies, but not all.
Heavy holdings: Compared with funds and virtual currencies, virtual currencies account for the larger share.
Light position: Compared with funds and virtual currencies, the share of funds is larger.
Short position: Sell all the virtual currencies in your hand and convert them into funds.
Take profit: After obtaining a certain amount of profit, sell the virtual currency held to keep the profit.
Stop loss: When the loss reaches a certain level, sell the virtual currency held to prevent further losses.
Bull Market: Prices continue to rise and the outlook is optimistic.
Bear market: Prices continue to fall and the outlook is bleak.
Long position (going long): The buyer believes that the price of the currency will rise in the future, buys the currency, and then sells it at a high price to realize profit after the price rises.
Short position (short selling): The seller believes that the price of the currency will fall in the future, so he sells part of the currency he holds (or borrows currency from the trading platform), locks the position and waits for the price to fall to a certain level before taking profit, which can also avoid risks.
Open a position: buy virtual currency.
Covering a position: Buy virtual currency in batches, such as buying 1 BTC first, and then buying another 1 BTC.
Rebound: When the price of a currency falls, it rebounds due to the rapid decline.
Consolidation (sideways): The price fluctuation is small and the currency price is stable.
Negative decline: The price of the currency declines slowly.
Diving (waterfall): The price of the currency drops rapidly and the amplitude is large.
Selling at a loss: After buying virtual currency, the price of the currency falls, and the virtual currency is sold at a loss to avoid further losses. Or after borrowing currency to short, the price of the currency rises, and the virtual currency is bought at a loss.
Being trapped: You expect the price of a currency to rise, but after buying it, the price drops unexpectedly; or you expect the price of a currency to drop, but after selling it, the price rises unexpectedly.
Unwinding: After buying virtual currency, the price of the currency drops, resulting in a temporary book loss, but then the price of the currency rebounds and the loss turns into profit.
Missing out on opportunities: After selling virtual currency due to pessimistic outlook on the market, the price of the currency continued to rise, and you failed to buy it in time, thus failing to make a profit.
Overbought: The price of the currency continues to rise to a certain height, the buying power is basically exhausted, and the price of the currency is about to fall.
Oversold: The price of the currency continues to fall to a certain low point, the selling power is basically exhausted, and the price of the currency is about to rise.
Lure more buyers: The currency price has been consolidating for a long time and is likely to fall. Most of the short sellers have already sold the virtual currency. Suddenly, the short sellers push up the currency price, inducing the long sellers to think that the currency price will rise and buy in. As a result, the short sellers suppress the currency price, trapping the long sellers.
Luring short sellers: After long sellers buy virtual currency, they deliberately suppress the price of the currency, causing short sellers to think that the price will fall and sell out in droves, thus falling into the trap of long sellers.
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