# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Loss

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Loss", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

10 Questions to Test Yourself: Are You a Trader or a Gambler?

Are You a Crypto Trader or a Gambler? Take This 10-Question Self-Assessment This article presents a 10-question checklist to help individuals determine if their cryptocurrency trading behavior is healthy or has crossed into problematic gambling. The questions are designed to be answered with a simple "yes" or "no." According to the author, answering "yes" to four or more questions indicates that a person is likely a gambler, not a disciplined trader. The questions probe various aspects of compulsive behavior, including: - Spending more time or money on trading than intended, or needing to increase stakes for excitement. - Failed attempts to stop or reduce trading, leading to restlessness or irritability. - An obsessive preoccupation with the crypto market that interferes with work, sleep, or family time. - Using trading as an escape from negative emotions like stress or depression. - "Chasing" losses by making more trades to recover money quickly. - Hiding the extent of trading activities or losses from loved ones. - Allowing trading to cause financial problems, such as debt or an inability to pay bills. - Neglecting hobbies, social activities, and self-care to focus on trading. - Taking excessive risks without research or using essential funds meant for necessities. - Continuing to trade despite recognizing the negative impact on mental or physical health. The assessment serves as a stark warning to evaluate one's relationship with cryptocurrency markets.

marsbit01/26 08:15

10 Questions to Test Yourself: Are You a Trader or a Gambler?

marsbit01/26 08:15

MACD Real Backtest: Can Technical Indicators Lead You to Profit?

Based on a comprehensive 5-year backtest of the MACD trading strategy on BTC and ETH, this analysis delivers a sobering reality check for traders. The key finding is that 90% of short-term trading activity, particularly lower timeframes (15m, 30m, 1h), underperforms a simple "buy and hold" strategy due to transaction costs, noise, and psychological strain. The "benchmark" returns for simply holding the assets were +48.86% for BTC and +53.00% for ETH. The data reveals that MACD strategy performance is highly dependent on timeframe and leverage: * **Short Timeframes (15m, 30m, 1h):** Nearly all configurations resulted in significant losses or complete liquidation (-100%), severely underperforming the buy-and-hold benchmark. * **4-Hour Timeframe:** This was the only timeframe where the MACD strategy consistently generated alpha. * **BTC 4h (1x leverage):** ~+96% return, successfully outperforming buy-and-hold by avoiding major bear markets. * **ETH 4h (1x leverage):** ~+205% return, dramatically outperforming its buy-and-hold benchmark due to ETH's strong trend-following characteristics. * **Leverage Impact:** Leverage (2x, 3x) on the 4h timeframe amplified these gains effectively (e.g., ETH 4h 3x leverage yielded +552%). However, higher leverage (5x) often led to diminished returns due to funding fees and volatility decay, despite increased risk. The "Death Matrix" of results shows that short-term, high-leverage trading is akin to gambling" with a near-certain outcome of failure. The final recommendation is clear: for most investors, a buy-and-hold strategy is superior to active trading on low timeframes. For those seeking to outperform, the only viable approach is applying moderate leverage (2x-3x) exclusively on the 4-hour timeframe, with ETH presenting the best opportunity for significant excess returns.

marsbit01/17 08:45

MACD Real Backtest: Can Technical Indicators Lead You to Profit?

marsbit01/17 08:45

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