In one of your earliest posts, you said that you turned $300 to $50,000. Assuming you didn't even trade and just sat in BTC, you'd have at least doubled that and would be sitting on at least $100,000 worth of BTC.
Do you have trouble trading such a huge amount? Like do you encounter liquidity problems? Or do you just trade tiny amounts?
I'd assume for the larger trades, you'd be in large markets like BTC/USD(T) and ETH/USD(T), but even if you trade like 1/4 of your portfolio (is that too much?) on probably a really sure trade (e.g. a really beautiful dip, from cracking a base that had a gigantic bounce), you'd still encounter tons of slippage while trying to enter/exit your trades.
Also, with such a large amount, do you sit in mostly BTC or USD(T)? I'm just thinking since you'd probably find greater liquidity in BTC/USD(T) and ETH/USD(T), you'd have a huge portion in USD(T), just waiting for those cracked bases so you can always be prepared to buy them up. But then, you'd miss moves like when BTC went from $1200 to $2500 in April/May.
Or do you just keep everything as BTC? After all, it just started out as "free money" from your $300, so you could probably consider those as "free coins". Although when BTC just recently dived from $2500+ to $2200, that would be lots of "paper losses". And it didn't even bounce back up to base yet, it just bounced to $2300 and went sideways (trailing downwards?) from there.... what would you do in those situations?
Would you have been sitting in BTC ignoring the volatility and just trading altcoins, or would you have been sitting in USDT buying that dip?
RE: Why I recomend 1hour candle charts, if your a new trader..