Honestly, this recent market trend has been quite torturous. The overall movement keeps fluctuating, with no sustained upward trend or genuine one-sided trend. Many people see a glimmer of hope, jump in, and are immediately knocked down again. After several cycles, not only is their capital shrinking, but their mindset is also gradually being worn down.


In this environment, the problem is often not about judging the wrong direction, but about being completely led by the market’s rhythm. When it rises, they’re afraid of missing out; when it falls, they’re afraid it will keep dropping. So they keep switching positions, changing strategies, and even blindly copying trades, hoping to turn a profit through others’ actions. But the reality is, most people don’t lose because of the market itself, but because of unstable execution and frequent adjustments.
During this period, I’ve also observed quite a few copy trading accounts. Honestly, some do manage to generate decent short-term gains, but they also come with significant drawdowns. In this kind of choppy market, without a stable logical support, relying solely on emotional trading can easily wipe out previous profits during a few fluctuations.
I’ve set up my own copy trading on @Gate_zh. It’s not for calling signals or high-frequency, explosive trading, but to openly share the complete set of logic I’m currently executing, so those willing can follow this rhythm directly.
My approach is actually very simple: it revolves around “stability” and “sustainability.” The core is just one thing: dollar-cost averaging into SOL contracts. When the price drops below 130, I slowly add to my position as long as I have income. If there’s no good opportunity, I patiently wait—no chasing the rally, no betting on short-term directions, and definitely no frequent trades driven by market sentiment swings.
This method may not be exciting or make you double your money in a short time, but its advantage is controllability. You know what you’re doing, and each step is supported by logic, rather than passively reacting to market ups and downs. In this kind of oscillating market, being able to stay steady is more important than short-term explosive gains.
My reason for opening this copy trading is straightforward. If recent market chaos has confused you or your trading lacks rhythm, you can follow me on Zhima and run this logic together. I’m not promising overnight doubling, but providing a relatively clear and stable execution path so you won’t be easily wiped out in this environment.
Markets will keep changing, but what truly determines the outcome is never the market itself, but how you choose to respond to it. Keep your rhythm steady, accumulate slowly—many times, that’s actually the easier way to reach the end.

@GateFutures
#合约战神 #Gate Contract Challenge #GateCom #Gatecom Exchange
SOL-2,35%
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CandlestickChartsUnderThe
· 3h ago
Will a dollar-cost averaging contract encounter extreme waterfalls? How to control position size and leverage, could you please explain?
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SummerNightColdWallet
· 3h ago
The short-term chart for follow/copy trading looks great, but once a pullback happens, everything gets wiped out. After going through it once, you learn to be more cautious and rein it in.
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GateUser-83a2dd8a
· 3h ago
Are you using cost-based layering or fixed-amount DCA for the SOL 130 range? Just looking to get a sense of the rhythm.
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MirrorBallGazingAtTheSky
· 3h ago
I will pay attention to the public execution records on Gate for a period of time, mainly observing how you handle drawdowns and the interval between adding positions.
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MintCondition
· 3h ago
It may not be exciting, but it can last a long time. What I lack most right now is this sustainable execution framework.
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GateUser-aa277334
· 3h ago
In a volatile market, chasing gains and selling losses is really just giving away profits; being able to stay still can actually win half the battle.
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NotYourExit
· 3h ago
It's a bit like turning trading into wealth management: add more when there's income, wait when there's no opportunity, and don't treat emotions as signals. This approach is quite counter to human nature but effective.
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QuantsAndCats
· 3h ago
This market is really frustrating; staying steady is the most important.
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