Tag: investing

  • In crypto, the impatient wins.

    In crypto, the impatient wins.

    crypto trading

    “Patient dog eats the fattest bone”… sounds like an African proverb. I’m not sure of the origin anyways, I’m not sure about its validity either. It was probably more correct a couple of years ago. Regardless, patience is a virtue; not always…, especially in crypto.

    Bagholders are a special set of people in this space, the most valuable set of investors. Everyone bagholds, at least once in a while. Holding on to a ‘poorly’ performing asset is a struggle between patience and hope…‘hopium’. Or a struggle between patience and greed when the asset is performing considerably well. Whenever you hold back from hitting that ‘buy’ or ‘sell’ button, any one of these wins. Well, patience is the base word.

    That works, in a few cases; some other times, it just doesn’t. A fast-moving space like the one we have in crypto is one of those few instances where holding on turns out to be the wrong move most times. Gains or losses, it could come at any time; unfortunately, these two can happen in (very) quick succession. Anyways, if you are here for the technology, profit or loss might matter a little to you. Making a few quick bucks doesn’t sound bad either.

    The popular preaching is to ‘hold on for dear life’. Let’s face the fact, most times this doesn’t really work. The path to bagholding is an easy one. Waiting for the millions and settling for a few thousand or hundreds is a quick turn of events here. The greed index is volatile, which in turn results in price volatility. Normal price movements are in response to human behavior. Apart from this, a space as unregulated as crypto might require you to “take what you can, when you can”. There’s hardly an assurance. The extent to which this happens depends largely on the nature of the project.

    Highly speculative projects are prone to sharp price movements. They are prone to ‘accidents’ as well. Most times, these accidents are deliberate and investors are left to mourn grave to mild losses. Well, ‘patient’ investors. Impatient ones probably took all or part of their profits already; in this case, they win. This case is becoming more prevalent. The lack of regulation in the space gives way to the speculative short-lived project. Huge pumps, ridiculous dumps. Investors are easily taken unaware by the quick turn of events. Patience fails them here, unfortunately.

    A rather clever move is putting patience to a halt and taking your capital out when a speculative project moves tangibly. The remainder can run along. If the dump strikes, your capital is preserved and a little profit if you’re impatient enough to take profits.

    This is not financial advice anyways, just a piece from individual experiences. Holding on to relevant projects for the long term could be very rewarding. Finding these projects from grass root could be a very tedious task though.

  • Don’t ‘over-diversify’ your portfolio!

    Don’t ‘over-diversify’ your portfolio!

    You just bought your first cryptocurrency; it feels great, I know. Makes you want to buy even more, sometimes the same token; other times a different one. That’s probably not you, you might have bought your first crypto many years ago. Regardless, the feeling is basically the same. Being in a space of over twenty-five thousand cryptocurrencies, promising ones; it is hard to just stay glued to one cryptocurrency. Maximalists think the opposite, but that’s fine anyways.

    Love happens many times, naturally. Whatever makes you like a cryptocurrency project can happen all over again, as many times as possible and in different ways. You’d end up investing in a couple of projects. one term for this — Diversification.

    The majority of cryptocurrency investors prefer to split their funds across a number of crypto assets. Personally, I do this too. For several reasons, a diversified portfolio is a common practice in the cryptocurrency space. Why pick one when you can actually get as many as possible? You know who has a different answer…

    A number of reasons would make an investor diversify. A gamer and a believer in Artificial intelligence will probably put his money on two projects related to this, maybe some Axie Infinity and SingularityNet tokens. If you fancy crypto as a portable payment medium, you’d probably add some ripple and stellar to your portfolio. This may go on as long as your cravings and sentiments.

    Apart from personal interests and minimizing risks, certain ethics held up by a project is enough to attract an investor’s attention to the extent of investing in them. Projects with a certain level of decentralization and encouragement for community involvement tend to attract a good number of investors. In contrast; centralized projects are also attractive to some. Whatever serves your taste the most. Investors love to put their money where their mouth is. But this could happen more than once and diversification may come in as a result. Diversification isn’t all shade of good anyways.

    Thousands of cryptocurrency projects, each one with plans of ‘taking over the world’; even baseless meme tokens plan to be the new world currency; even though they don’t even run on their own blockchain. Every cryptocurrency project is painted with buzzwords and sounds all cool. It’s hard not to fall in love too many times. But resist the urge to go with these feelings.

    Most times they result in you splitting your funds to satisfy your ragging love for several projects. An over-diversified portfolio might sound like a hedge against the volatile cryptocurrency space. But it’s not. In a space as wild as this, spreading your investment could turn out to be just another way of increasing your risk level; especially when this diversification is (almost) based on hypes and external suggestions.

    Capitalizing on a few credible investments has proven to be profitable; in fact, maximalists hardly get it wrong. The strong conviction that keeps one glued to just one project is most times a result of extensive research and belief, this works better than sporadic investments driven by little knowledge. Your investment in over fifty cryptocurrency projects still stands more chance of failure than an investment in ten well-studied projects or even less.

    It’s a nice approach to have your eggs spread through a number of baskets. Diversification might simply be a representation of your convictions and personal interests. However, spreading your investments irregularly stands more chances of backfiring than not. Every cryptocurrency project is shiny and ‘full of potential’; most times this turns out differently. Diversification, just like any other strategy works when done well. But here’s a suggestion, “don’t overdo it”