Investment Traps: Analysis of Four Misunderstandings

1. half-hearted

Many investors have experienced this situation: they have clearly made a plan, but the market risks have not yet been fully released. They should wait and see, but they can't help but be attracted by various temptations and make hasty moves. In addition, some investors believed that a certain currency had huge room for growth and originally wanted to hold on to the currency and wait and see. However, they hurriedly sold under the threat of a market shake-up, only to later find out that it was a false alarm.

2. Don’t dare to buy high-priced coins

The purchase price of high-priced coins is usually higher, and investors have limited funds on hand and often cannot buy much. In a bull market, they believe that high-priced coins have a lot of room to fall, and prefer to buy cheap, low-priced coins. However, the reason why high-priced coins are so expensive must be unique.

3. Subjective assumptions

Subjective conjecture is based on personal feelings and thoughts and is not based on objective facts. For example, "It has fallen so much, it must have bottomed out, right?", "It has risen so much, it must have peaked." These remarks are all subjective assumptions of investors.

4. Worry too much

When deciding to sell, he was influenced by other investors and ultimately changed his decision to sell, missing the opportunity to sell. Some investors have the mentality of "once bitten by a snake, but afraid of the rope for ten years" due to their past failure experiences. They hesitate and worry every time they operate, and therefore miss many good opportunities.

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