The solution is that an investor must create reasons to convince himself of the project he wants to invest in.
If he is a smart investor, he wouldn’t have to invent reasons just to convince himself to invest. A smart investor will see an opportunity, a potential, and a good reason to invest in a project.
for example, by conducting in-depth research because the research results can convince you to invest or not. With these two things, an investor can control the value of his investment and be confident in his investment.
I think that an investor who isn’t confident in his or her own investment is bound to experience losses. You need to have some trust in your investment otherwise you’re wasting your time and money.
That's the thing about investment, I mean we are talking about something mathematical here, if the "reason" is because charts show that it should be going up then that reason is a fine reason. But if you need another reason then it makes no sense to me at all, I feel like that is not going to be all that easy or simple to make it work.
The best way to go would be just realizing that things aren't as simple as you make them out to be and if you think that you need a reason then you are on the wrong path. The only reason to invest into something is because you see something that will make it go up, and if you have that data then you will invest, it's not a "feeling", it's literal facts that will make you invest if you know what you are doing.