This question probably hits home for many people.



From beginners to veterans, it seems everyone keeps asking themselves the same question—how much profit is enough? Do you sell after doubling your money, or wait for ten or twenty times, or just hold tight for the next wave?

Some make a plan to sell half after a 50% gain but forget about it once the market starts to rise. Others see the coin price surge and are unwilling to exit, ending up trapped. Still, some stubbornly see unrealized gains as losses.

In the crypto world, psychological resilience is often more challenging than technical analysis. Taking profits seems simple—set a target price and sell when reached. But when that moment comes, FOMO, greed, and luck all kick in. Some people achieve their expected gains but regret not holding longer. Others aim for the perfect top and end up getting caught off guard.

The key also depends on your trading cycle and capital size. Short-term trading and long-term holding have completely different profit-taking logic. You’re investing spare funds and testing your risk tolerance, so the capacity to endure risk varies.

So the real question isn’t "how much to earn before stopping," but rather "what is your trading plan, and how strong is your execution?"
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StablecoinAnxietyvip
· 2h ago
To be honest, this is exactly how my daily routine looks. I set my take-profit point and then forget about it as soon as I turn around.
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LiquidationAlertvip
· 2h ago
Honestly, whether to take profit really depends on mindset; plans can never keep up with the market. --- People who take 50% profit and then run are the ones who end up FOMO chasing higher prices, I believe. --- Execution is the key issue. Most people simply don't have it. --- Those who get trapped and refuse to cut losses are the ones who are unwilling to let go; greed truly is the original sin. --- The logic for short-term and long-term profit-taking is indeed different, but ultimately it's about self-discipline. --- Seeing floating profits as losses—what kind of operation is that? That must be so anxiety-inducing. --- The idea of perfectly timing the top to chase is a trap in itself; no one can pinpoint the exact moment. --- The mindset for idle funds and principal is completely different; that's the real dividing line. --- Is it a planning problem or an execution problem? Usually, both are lacking.
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degenonymousvip
· 2h ago
Honestly, it's a matter of execution; plans can never keep up with market changes.
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MiningDisasterSurvivorvip
· 2h ago
I've been through it all; plans can't keep up with market changes, and execution is the key. During that wave in 2018, I was caught almost completely because of greed, but now I've learned to be smarter.
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HashRateHustlervip
· 2h ago
That hits too close to home. I'm the one who sets a 50% target and then runs. But when I see the rally still going crazy, I soften up. The feeling of being trapped now is truly unbearable.
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NeverPresentvip
· 2h ago
Haha, speaking of this, I just remembered the group of people who got played by the sudden surge last time, and they completely forgot their plans.
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