#比特币2026年行情展望 【Trading Execution Manual · January 16, 2026】



Many people treat trading like luck, but I think the core issue is—there's no standardized execution process. The difference between professional traders and retail investors lies in this checklist.

Trading shouldn't be impulsive; it should follow a process. Every trade should correspond to an item on the checklist, so that decision-making shifts from emotion-driven to system-driven.

How exactly to do this? It can be divided into three stages:

**Pre-market Preparation**: Mark support and resistance levels, clarify how much position to take today, set stop-loss points. All these should be written down on paper, not just thought in your head.

**Execution Phase**: Enter a position when the price reaches the target, execute stop-loss decisively, avoid adding positions arbitrarily, and do not skip any rules. The most common problem here—many people change their minds at critical moments.

**Post-trade Reflection**: Record deviations in execution for each trade, analyze the real reasons behind profits or losses, identify areas where the system can be optimized. Data will tell you what works.

In essence, it's about systematizing trading, making decisions repeatable, and actions auditable. You’re no longer gambling but inspecting a mature system.

$BNB $XRP $SOL These currencies have been quite volatile recently. Using this framework to execute will significantly improve your win rate.

Improve a little every day, and your system will become more and more solid.
BNB-0,01%
XRP0,21%
SOL-0,09%
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ShibaSunglassesvip
· 01-19 02:31
I really agree with this point on paper. Thinking about opening a position in your mind makes you a rookie—I'm talking about myself back then, haha. The key is discipline. Without discipline, even the best system is useless.
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OldLeekNewSicklevip
· 01-19 02:23
There's nothing wrong with that, but it's really easy to lose control when executing. I always think I'll come back tomorrow, but then I get caught the next day. Now I keep in mind every loss, pretending I'm doing data analysis, but really I'm just looking for reasons to get cut, haha. $BNB This wave definitely has some rhythm, but no matter how good the framework is, human nature can't be withstand, right? The key is to endure those tempting moments.
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Ser_Liquidatedvip
· 01-16 05:20
Haha, I still have to rely on pen and paper. Thinking in my head just doesn't work at all. To be honest, execution is the hardest part. At critical moments, I tend to change my mind, and I do this quite often. The note-taking system sounds simple, but I guess there aren't many people who stick with it. I'll give it a try.
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AlphaLeakervip
· 01-16 05:19
Writing on paper versus recording on paper, that's the real difference. Putting it down truly makes a difference. --- Drawing lines before the open, executing with determination, analyzing data afterward—easy to talk about, hard to do. --- Stop-loss is the most painful part; you have to cut at the right time. Most people get caught when they change their mind. --- BNB has been fluctuating these days, but without a clear list, it's just shooting in the dark. No matter how many waves, it's all pointless. --- System-driven vs. emotion-driven—this is the dividing line between professionals and gamblers. --- Recording execution deviations may sound boring, but reflection is indeed the necessary path to level up and beat the game. --- A repeatable system sounds vague, but when used effectively, it’s powerful. I believe it can maintain a steady win rate. --- It seems many people are just too lazy to make a list, thinking quickly to save time, but the faster they go, the more they lose. --- Support and resistance levels must be written in black and white; otherwise, impulsive decisions will throw everything into chaos.
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rug_connoisseurvip
· 01-16 05:18
It's another classic topic of systematic trading, but to be honest, I still find it easy to break down at critical moments. Paper-based stop-loss and actual execution are two different things.
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GasWaster69vip
· 01-16 05:13
Enough, enough. Another set of system theory, I'm tired of hearing it. The problem is that most people can't stick to it for more than three days; what looks good on paper is discarded after a single market wave.
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