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23841603 No.23841603 [Reply] [Original]

Better to buy a flat lined bottom or a coin that dips/fluctuates?

Looking at either Nano (flat lined), or Quant (just dipped)

>> No.23841689

Btc

>> No.23841940

>>23841603
CVC

>> No.23842022

XRP, its basically a stablecoin so you cant LOSE money, but there is a 1% chance it really is the standard and is used in the Great Reset. You buy a few thousand dollars worth, hold it, and see what happens. Worst case it dips 0.01 and you lose a negligible amount. Best case it moons and you can order your own planetoid.

>> No.23842451

None of you fags answered my question.

>Is it better to buy a flat lined bottom or a coin that dips/fluctuates?

>> No.23842622
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23842622

Oh goodness, OP. I will hold back on insulting you and just assume you're new. For reference, here are the two charts you suggest.

Nano is dead, like most other coins from the last market cycle. It is NOT coming back, ever, in any significant way.

Look at CMC historical snapshots for the first bullrun (13/14) and see what happened to the coins that were popular back then.

It was clear two years ago which coins from 17/18 were going to survive and thrive. Look at the BTC chart itself, for instance, or BNB.

Generally if you're not sure, never buy a coin that has been through a market-wide bullrun already. Buy coins from this market cycle that have yet to come near their potential.

>> No.23842649
File: 245 KB, 1472x2464, protip.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
23842649

I made this pic a while ago, more examples for you.

>> No.23842671

It's always better to buy new. I bought STRN and already 4x. You know this already.

>> No.23842906

But wouldn't a crypto that has flatlined be a relatively high reward risk? A crypto that fluctuates a lot seems like it has a higher risk for violently dumping.

>> No.23843002

>>23842906
It has lots of bagholders eager to sell on the way up as soon as they break-even. This adds lots of upside resistance. You want something without this history.

>> No.23843510

>>23843002
I hear that, but if someone bought $90,000 worth at $30, and the current price is $1, if they were to sell at $5.00 it would only net them a $15,000 sale. What I am saying is, those that bought at high prices won't be adding much to the downward liquidity unless they sell at those same prices. Since the difference from the peak to the floor is so much, there should be plenty of room to profit in between. Not to mention all of those who capitulated on the way down.

>> No.23843527

>>23842649
thats just during pampening, all of these graphs are bad