#美联储回购协议计划 $SOL has recently shown a weak trend, and short-term rebound opportunities for long positions are worth paying attention to. If you want to be more conservative, you can consider the following tiered position-building approach:
Place staggered orders at 118.88, 116.88, 114.88, and 112.88, with the position ratios gradually increasing as 1:2:4:6, or more conservatively, distribute evenly with 1:1:1:1.
When encountering resistance levels on smaller timeframes above, take partial profits in stages. The key is to manage your positions well—setting the overall liquidation price below 70 is more reasonable, which provides enough risk buffer.
If your cost basis is below 130, holding SOL in medium- to long-term spot or futures long positions, there's no need to worry too much about these short-term fluctuations. Just stick to your positions. This rebound either gives you a chance to add to your positions or can be seen as a normal correction, so there's no need to overtrade.
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DustCollector
· 2h ago
I'm already tired of the gradient building position strategy. To put it simply, it's just betting on a rebound. Whether SOL can return to 120+ this time is really uncertain.
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GasSavingMaster
· 6h ago
This time, SOL really needs to scale up gradually; can't go all in. This plan is stable.
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SandwichVictim
· 6h ago
This round of SOL is really frustrating, feels like old-fashioned leek harvesting again.
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quietly_staking
· 6h ago
I think this wave of SOL is okay, just need to manage positions well and not be greedy.
The layered position building approach is indeed reliable, and risk buffering is very important.
If the cost is below 130, just relax; there's no need to fuss over short-term fluctuations.
This kind of market really tests your mentality, truly.
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PancakeFlippa
· 6h ago
This wave of SOL indeed looks a bit weak, but this kind of gradual accumulation strategy is quite solid.
It feels like just holding and lying flat below 130 is enough, no need to fuss.
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ShadowStaker
· 7h ago
ngl the 1:2:4:6 pyramid thing is textbook risk management theater... sure, it looks clean on paper but does anyone actually stick to it when things go sideways? the real issue is validator attrition during these dips, watching sol network resilience metrics while everyone's worried about their liquidation levels... kinda backwards imho
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LiquidityHunter
· 7h ago
Wait, can SOL really rebound to 118 this time? It feels a bit uncertain.
#美联储回购协议计划 $SOL has recently shown a weak trend, and short-term rebound opportunities for long positions are worth paying attention to. If you want to be more conservative, you can consider the following tiered position-building approach:
Place staggered orders at 118.88, 116.88, 114.88, and 112.88, with the position ratios gradually increasing as 1:2:4:6, or more conservatively, distribute evenly with 1:1:1:1.
When encountering resistance levels on smaller timeframes above, take partial profits in stages. The key is to manage your positions well—setting the overall liquidation price below 70 is more reasonable, which provides enough risk buffer.
If your cost basis is below 130, holding SOL in medium- to long-term spot or futures long positions, there's no need to worry too much about these short-term fluctuations. Just stick to your positions. This rebound either gives you a chance to add to your positions or can be seen as a normal correction, so there's no need to overtrade.