Pro tip for order execution: When you're setting a buy order, nudge the price slightly higher than your target—don't be too rigid about it. Similarly, with a sell order, move it a touch lower. The logic is straightforward: you want your orders to actually fill, not just sit there hoping. A small adjustment to your entry or exit can be the difference between watching price action pass you by and actually capturing it. Sometimes chasing the order book by a fraction pays off more than holding the line.
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MEVHunterNoLoss
· 01-05 21:58
This move is brilliant. I used to hold onto my positions stubbornly and lose money just like that.
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AirdropHunterWang
· 01-05 10:36
这trick我早就用上了,不然盘子动起来时真的抓不到
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GasFeeCrybaby
· 01-05 06:53
Honestly, I've been using this trick for a while, but most newbies still stubbornly hold onto the price, watching their orders gather dust haha
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AirdropHunterXM
· 01-02 22:54
Honestly, sticking rigidly to the price really costs a lot; being flexible is definitely the right approach.
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MissedAirdropAgain
· 01-02 22:53
That's why I lost money, I was too greedy and always trying to get the optimal price.
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MeaninglessApe
· 01-02 22:39
That's right, stubbornly holding onto the price is a suicidal act.
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wagmi_eventually
· 01-02 22:29
You're absolutely right, I'd rather make less profit than lose the deal.
Pro tip for order execution: When you're setting a buy order, nudge the price slightly higher than your target—don't be too rigid about it. Similarly, with a sell order, move it a touch lower. The logic is straightforward: you want your orders to actually fill, not just sit there hoping. A small adjustment to your entry or exit can be the difference between watching price action pass you by and actually capturing it. Sometimes chasing the order book by a fraction pays off more than holding the line.