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June 28, 2015, 09:46:57 PM Last edit: June 29, 2015, 02:55:08 PM by markm |
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A lot of folk jump on things that are already rising in price, thus buying them higher, especially when you also consider they often lack the patience and/or the faith in exchanges to leave funds on an exchange in the form of a buy offer waiting to be taken up on the offer, so they buy directly from the sell side instead of placing orders on the buy side.
Also many of them have regular jobs, so maybe cannot respond instantly. A lot might snatch a glimpse at the internet during the workday, tell themselves damn gotta react to that real soon, maybe also already have plans that night so might not even get to it that day, so there can be quite a bit of delay in reacting even without taking into account most exchanges want some number of blocks/confirmations before crediting deposits.
Thus often when something goes up folk not only don't say to themselves damn should have bought that when it was low, oh well maybe I will buy it when it goes down again, but instead jump into the bubble; then it takes them as much as a day or few to actually get liquid on an exchange ready to buy; by which time profit-taking is starting by folks faster than them; so often after all that hassle of digging up old daemon and waiting for blockchain to update so as to send buying-coin to an exchange to buy with and waiting for the deposit of the coin you're buying with to confirm and be credited to your account, the price is already rapidly falling.
Remember that folks holding the coin are in same delay boat, they see their coin is going up so want to dump it but, like the buyers, they take time to get them to the exchange, because they mostly have not left them on the exchange on the sell side all along ready to automagically profit from the skyrocket. So often by the time they get them ready to dump they missed the peak.
Then instead of saying to themselves oh well that took too long maybe I should always have funds on the exchange to buy with (and buy stuff that hasn't started to skyrocket yet, placing sell orders on sell side to be first in line to profit when the skyrocket happens) they go like damn well that was too much hassle to undo, heck with taking my funds back off the exchange and heck with leaving them there, I'll just dump them while I am here since I do not want to go again through the hassle of digging up my wallet catching up the blockchain and sending to exchange.
I saw that a lot with DeVCoin, it would go up but dumpers would take so long to get coins to an exchange to dump them that prices would not be good by the time they dumped, but they would dump anyway after going to all the trouble of actually getting the coins to an exchange.
EDIT: Part of the problem might be trading strategies one finds in books, things like moving averages and such, which wait for the sign of the slope of the curve to change (upward to downward or vice-versa) before acting instead of predicting inadvance what ought someday to rise and buying it ahead of time to be already in position when it happens. Problem being such strategies assume you are ready at the instant to react, maybe with automatic triggers. When it might take you a day or few to react, you become a sucker reacting not a canny trader getting in as near the peak or trough as technical trading (math such as slope detection) can figure out what to get in or out of. If it will take hours or days to react, don't bother, you will tend toward too late. By the time a balloon starts to rise it is damn near too late unles you are awake and ready and liquid; the thing to do is buy stuff that is as close to rock bottom as you can find, but that you have good reason to elieve will take off again some day, and get your sell orders already in place on the sell order-books long before it actually does start to take off.
(TL;DR buy things that are dropping, sell things that are rising, not the other way around; and place your orders on the buy or sell side instead of buying directly from the sell side or selling directly to the buy side. Sure the exchange could run off with all your funds but that is only an issue at startup, once you have withdrawn back your capital so that all left on the exchange is already pure profit all they'd be stealing is some of your profligate profits, none of your initial capital.)
-MarkM-
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