From 0 to Hero in 5 minutes with a fleet of AI Agents building, backtesting, and optimizing algo trading strategies for @Polymarket:
"Quanta, build me 3 advanced BTC/USDT Polymarket '5min up & down' strategies, ... " š§µ
$PRICELESS coded
CZ and Binance max shilling Priceless
They want to flip $USELESS on SOL
PRICELESS $BNB > USELESS $SOL
Let the games begin
0x7d03759e5b41e36899833cb2e008455d69a24444
Time to be in the Trenches again I guess:
This time our gun is loaded with $HYPE
š«
Fast setup for Hyperliquid EVM Chain deploy:
1. Gear up: Create your wallet with the Hype Sniping Bot
https://t.co/6Omhm69IEQ
2. Ammo check: Connect Phantom wallet (with SOL) and bridge funds
https://t.co/Vfs1nhk85J
3. Lock your target: Enter your Hype wallet address & bridge
4. Load your rifle: Download Rabby Wallet, import Sniper Bot private key
Meme Launchpads to watch:
- https://t.co/F5W5fG1Sh5 (frontline with non-bonded tokens & chat)
- https://t.co/L1Ez859TfB
Fire on memes:
- Connect Rabby at https://t.co/F5W5fG1Sh5 for non-bonded tokens
- Snipe bonded projects with HyperEVM Sniper Bot
https://t.co/6Omhm69IEQ
Join the Hyperliquid trenches: https://t.co/rEz4uCoYFT
ā ļø Guard your private key like your life depends on it!
Traders become deeply spiritual people after a rollercoaster ride of gains and losses - the markets teach impermanence and the rising and falling away of things. Those with eyes open realize nothing is ever ours, we merely possess things temporarily - as such grasping for refuge in outcomes is the incorrect way, the present moment is our only safe haven.
52 Trading Never-Dos: Lessons Every Trader Learns The Hard Way
1) Never oversize. That is when you start becoming irrational. Blowing up while still being right is the fastest way to ruin.
2) Never trade when tired or sleep-deprived. Decision fatigue has ended more traders than liquidation ever could.
3) Never trade without a defined edge. Entering without one is just gambling with extra steps. If you canāt explain your edge in a single sentence, you probably donāt have one.
4) Never enter a position out of boredom. The desire to always be in a trade leads to suboptimal returns. More often than not, doing nothing is the best move.If you find yourself taking trades just to feel busy or because you āhavenāt traded in a while,ā check yourself. Trading for action leads to sloppy decisions and lossesā.Thereās no prize for the most trades ā only for the most profitable trades. Sometimes the best trade is no trade
5) Never trade after a big loss. Tilt sets in, and you try to win it all back in one bad bet. Trying to recover everything at once is a guaranteed way to lose even more.
6) Never enter a position without an exit plan. Whether itās a time-based stop, price stop, invalidation, or catalyst-driven exitādefine it before you enter. Remember, the last moment of objectivity is before you place the tradeā.Once youāre in, itās much harder to admit youāre wrong, so decide beforehand when to cut the loss.
7) Never marry your bags. The market doesnāt care about your conviction. Cut or be cut.
8) Never trade your PNLātrade the market. Chasing losses or fixating on past wins clouds judgment and distorts execution.
9) Not all views are meant to be traded. The best trade is often no trade. Preserving capital and mental bandwidth for when odds favor you is more important than forcing activity.
10) Never fight the trend. The wave is stronger than you. Adapt or get wiped out.
11) Never try to knife catch without reason. "Cheap" can always get cheaper.
12) Never break your trading rules or deviate from your plan in the heat of the moment.ā Your rules exist for a reason ā usually learned from painful experience. The moment you convince yourself ājust this onceā to ignore a rule (like moving a stop, or doubling down, or trading too big), you open the door to chaos. Discipline is doing the right thing even when itās hard. As one trading maxim goes, plan the trade and trade the plan.
13) Never fire all your bullets at once.
14) Never trade outside your comfort zone. If a position is too big, youāll start making fear-based decisions, thinking that market or someone is trying to liquidate you seeing ghosts where none exists. Size your trades proportional to the quality of your sleep at night.
15) Never let ego keep you in a bad trade. Admit when you're wrongācut, reset, move on.
16) Never underestimate market reflexivity. Strength can always go higher, weakness can always go lower.
17) Never assume liquidity will be there when you need it. The exit door is always smaller than you imagineāliquidity isnāt something you decide, the market does.
18) Never mistake randomness for strategy. Buying because price is going up or shorting because it āfeels highā isnāt tradingāitās blind betting. Even with good risk management, youāll bleed out over time if your entries are based on nothing.
19) Never make the same mistake twice. Trading mistakes are inevitable, repeating them is unacceptable. Never lose the same way twice
20) Never forget to play defense. Being wrong is acceptable, staying wrong is not. Protecting capital always comes first. "Donāt focus on making money; focus on protecting what you have.ā
21) Never just focus on offense. Survival > everything. If you donāt bet, you canāt win. If you lose all your chips, you canāt bet.
22) Never fall into lifestyle creep after one big win. The problem starts when you begin forecasting annual income based on a single lucky trade.
23) Never forget to turn defensive after a hot streak. Big losses come after a series of wins when overconfidence sets in. Check your egoāyour last big trade means nothing to the market.
24) Never let pride, ego, or overconfidence take over. Always stay humble.|
25) Never trade in situations where you donāt have control. for eg. FOMC events
26) Never get complacent. A strategy that worked in one regime may stop working in another. Trading is a craft that requires continuous self-improvement. Comfort Is Often the Enemy of your PNL. Never assume you know for sure what the market will do. āWe have two classes of forecasters: those who donāt know ā and those who donāt know that they donāt know.āā Never assume your edge is permanent. Markets evolve, edges fade, and what worked last cycle may be useless in the next. Keep refining, keep testingāstagnation is death.
27) Never ever average losers after your reasoning has been invalidated
28) Never trade with certainty, trade with conviction.
29) Never assume the market āmustā do something, especially based on recent patterns.āThe market doesnāt owe you continuity or logic. Just because a market has been rising (or falling) steadily doesnāt mean it canāt abruptly reverse. Avoid words like āsurelyā or ācanāt possiblyā in trading. Stay flexible ā anything can happen. As a reminder: never say never about market behavior.
30) Never mistake win rate for everything. Maximizing winning trades for the sake of feeling good is a trap. Taking profits too early or avoiding necessary small losses ultimately hurts profitability.
31) Never underestimate discipline, patience, risk control, and execution over alpha generation. Plenty of traders have great alpha flow but donāt know how to use it.Good execution involves choosing not just what and how to trade, but when not to trade. Sometimes the best execution decision is no trade at all if conditions arenāt suitable. Always ask: āDo I have an edge here, or am I flipping coins?ā If itās the latter, save your capital for a better spot.
32) Never fall apart after a big loss or get euphoric after a big win. Emotional resilience is a traderās strongest asset.
33)Never ignore price action after news. If the market reacts opposite to what you expected, get out. The market is telling you something you donāt see.
34) Never trade on borrowed conviction. If you buy on someone elseās tip, youāll need them to call your exit tooāand when they go silent, youāre stuck. As Livermore said: āNobody makes big money on what someone else tells him to do.ā Hone your own craft, build your own system. If you canāt trust your own decisions, youāre just a pawn in someone elseās trade.
35) Never go against your intuition. If something feels off, it usually is.
36) Never try to Catch Every Move Itās tempting to try to grab every up and down in the market, but thatās a foolās errand. Always come from the mindset of abundance and not scarcity, markets will still be there and there are ample opportunities in the market to make you whole,
you donāt need to swing at every pitch.
37) Never underestimate the power of failure. Failing early and failing oftenāwhile staying in the gameāis how you get better.
38) Never hold onto losers when your thesis is invalidated, especially after a massive drop. "Iāve lost too much to sell now" is how you go to zero.
39) Never let "getting back to break even" dictate your decisions. That mindset leads to overtrading and eventually, full liquidation.
40) Never focus only on entries. A trade isnāt over until youāve exited. Knowing when to cash out is just as important as knowing when to enter.
41) Never ignore the āboringā part (position sizing, stops, risk/reward) ā itās what keeps you in business.Donāt wait for a catastrophic loss to teach you this lesson.
42) Never trade for the adrenaline rush, Trade for the win
43) Never fall into the illusion of strengthāitās often just lagging behind reality.
44) Never stay/enter in a position out of 'HOPE' and wishful thinking
45) Never underestimate risk management. Prioritize protecting capital over chasing profits. "Take care of your losses, and the profits will take care of themselves."
46) Never exit/enter a position recklessly. The same way you scale in, you should scale outā"all in, all out" is a recipe for disaster.
47) Never make a bet you canāt afford to lose. No single trade should ever be big enough to take you out of the game.āThe most important advice is to never let a loser get out of hand.ā You should be able to be wrong 20 or 30 times in a row and still have capital leftā. Never allow a single position to jeopardize your trading career
48) Never trade outside your edge. If itās not there, sit out. Forcing trades outside your framework is how accounts erode.
49) Never assume your edge is permanent. Markets evolve, edges fade, and what worked last cycle may be useless in the next. Keep refining, keep testingāstagnation is death.
50) Never judge a trade solely by its outcome. Good trades lose money sometimes, and bad trades can get lucky. Focus on execution over results.
51) Never worry about looking stupid or staying in a position because of your public opinion. I have seen many a men die before their time because they were worried about getting publicly ashamed. Cut your losses without hesitation. The market doesnāt care about your prideāneither should you.
52) Never underestimate the power of stepping away. If youāre in a losing streak, liquidate everything and take a break. Mental capital is just as important as financial capital. The key is to break the negative emotional spiral
Once you come back keep your size small and increase exposure only when you gain back your confidence.
These lessons were learned thanks to the books Iāve read, the smart traders Iāve learned from, and the endless mistakes Iāve made along the way.
Trading is lonely. It hurts. It makes you question everything. But if I had to choose again? Iād still take this over everything.
@martypartymusic Imo $QUIL @QuilibriumInc is the real deal here. No other network can handle what they achieve. Plus there are not owned by vicious cabal VC
Just want to write my thoughts out - roughly about what happened
TLDR : the bond market almost blew up last night. Trump saw it. He recognized it as such. Bessent told him that if he didnāt deal with it there would be a disorderly melt down and his presidency would be over.
There were 3 additional shocks that forced this - namely - collapsing municipal bond funds, mortgage REITs which are structurally short rates vol, and accelerating 2 year inflation expectations confirmed by gappy up moves in gold and the Swiss franc that questioned the credibility of the US
The alternative is āwho knows whatā - but the Liz Truss analogue likely resonated w Trump. Her term was ended coincidentally at exactly the 5% yield mark as well at the same time as UK equities and fx collapsed (the same situation as we just had)
They cooked up the plan and did it.
Then gathered people around and unified around the 4d chess narrative
Once the UK caved to the bond market this was very positive to both GBP and UK risk assets but hasnāt really done anything to solve their long term debt problems (yields are still near 5%). So markets likely more / less on the same play book
I think whatās different now vs before is
1) corporations donāt trust Trump
2) Europe doesnāt trust Trump especially after Ukraine
#1 is most relevant to crypto prices on a go forward but #2 is also relevant
Corporations now have a strong reason to try and insulate their business from the impact of tariffs. This means with international diversification. But also to some extent - using crypto to mask the destination and source of funds for tech transactions. Provisions that exempted software or ai models from tariffs are not certain to last - and now everyone sees what happens when a politician acts on populist impulses
Massive de rating
Additionally the EU is most likely not going to suddenly start singing Kumbaya. Usdcnh tanked today signaling that China gained negotiation power. Europe is also seeing economic deceleration now which is coinciding with Italian German spreads blowing out
They see the US trying to entrench dollar reserve currency status by making it the base asset of global crypto transactions . Something facilitated by Tether.
Given the terrible vibes this has led the EU to begin fast tracking their cbdc program as an alternative to USD cleared blockchain transactions.
But because the EU isnāt a particularly good region to invest in, doesnāt have much AI firepower outside of ASMl and is already plagued by periphery problems shortly after ramping defense spend - the US dollar stablecoins will probably attract a lot of European capital
This will be an important structural driver of crypto - and will likely accelerate from here in large part due to the tariff actions
Overall this whole saga will likely turn out to be quite positive for crypto as it erodes the credibility of the system while at the same time avoiding a full scale collapse they could have resulted in crypto being permanently marred by its association with Trump
The bond markets and corporations are optically in control and far more stable than nationalists who have been recently humiliated by market forces
Given aggressive sell offs crypto remains an appealing long. The big change between now and before is that businesses know they have to diversify their international profile in a way thatās allowed - and crypto is that mechanism
Whatās uncertain is the likelihood of outright military conflict with China - I have no view on that.
The indicator to watch for sustained rally will be declining high yield CDX and increasing U.S. dollar stablecoins inflows as that is key to all of what I wrote above being true on a continuous basis
Thx to Runbot I had to awaken the bull in me.
Forget about your fake tickers based on evaporated hype.
$RBOT is a true product, already generating great revenue.
Enjoy the low price during this shitty period till it lasts.