So what is a good exit strategy to have for coins? ETH is at an ATH, so it seems like there would be a dip coming up, but how do you judge how far the dip would go? Is there proper way to figure out the support/tolerance for cryptos given to their extreme volatility?
>>2117591
No dip directly to jupiter
>>2117591
here's what you do
>buy high
>sell low
or buy bitbean and reddcoin and hold them for a year while staking and tell me how you've done
>>2117591
You'll be better off in the long run to hold. You don't know a dip is coming. You'd have to come up for a plan to buy back low. You don't know how low, when, or if it will even continue up if you re-buy. It might be higher than you sold when you rebuy, losing money. So just hold (unless you are so rich you don't care).
>>2117591
>ETH is at an ATH
kek
>Yesterday
ETH is at an ATH
>A week ago
ETH is at an ATH
>Two weeks ago
ETH is at an ATH
>A month ago
ETH is at an ATH
>Two months ago
ETH is at an ATH
>Six months ago
ETH is at an ATH
>A year ago ($10-$20/coin)
ETH is at an ATH
>A year and four months ago ($1/coin)
ETH is at an ATH
>>2117883
Yes but the point is that it dips after each ATH typically
>>2117934
20 to 10 was the largest dip. The max ether dips now is 10%, e.g. 100 to 90. Dips will get smaller as price grows as well, look at bitcoin's weekly behavior
>>2117934
I'm not risking getting left behind and having to rebuy at a higher price point with ETH. This is my true moon ticket, screw daytrading it around like its a little shitcoin.
So the window will slowly be closing, I got in at $80, if I leave now it's about $125, which is about at 35% profit which isn't bad. But what would I use to judge what the dip window would be, to see if it would be worth it to hold or not?
hold until rigel VII