Trader Eugene is long$60 million SOL: What did I learn after experiencing the largest single loss?

avatar
BlockTempo
a day ago
This article is machine translated
Show original
Here is the English translation:

On X, a cryptocurrency trader Eugene Ng Ah Sio with over 110,000 followers, posted a recap of his recent long position in SOL on the social media platform X yesterday (24th). He detailed his entry point, the mistakes he made, and the thought process behind his eventual correct decision to cut losses in a timely manner. The following is a translation of his trading recap for investors' reference.


Trading Recap: Long SOL (December 17 to 21)

This will be a slightly different analysis, where I will explain in detail my entry point, the mistakes I made, and how I made the right decision to minimize my losses.

Entry

After perfectly capturing the short-term upswing in Bitcoin from $102k to $107k, I decided to extend my long position to SOL and the Solana ecosystem. My entry point provided me with a moderate risk-reward ratio (r/r), specifically: long $220 SOL, $2.75 WIF, and $0.037 BONK. This was based on the strong performance of SOL in the short term and the success of my previous trades.

When Bitcoin started to reverse and decline around $108k, I disliked the underperforming meme coin longs, so I implemented a stop-loss strategy and accepted those losses. (This was the right process!) However, I did not close my SOL long position, but instead increased my position from $20 million to $30 million, leading to Mistake 1.

Mistake 1: Failure to Cut Losses Timely

One of my strengths is that I am usually able to quickly close positions that have lost momentum, to avoid further deterioration. However, this time, I chose not to cut losses at $215, even though I believed the market might see a downward move after the FOMC meeting. Ultimately, bias prevailed over logic - my psychological price level was the $200 key support, and since I was too close to it, I did not want to be "chopped" while trying to capture a 5% move.

When SOL reached the $200 support, I further increased my position from $30 million to $45 million, believing the risk-reward ratio was optimal within the long-term support range. I did not consider this a mistake, but it certainly made the already precarious trade even worse.

Mistake 2: Disregarding the Stop Loss

When SOL broke below $200, the most rational choice would have been to close the position as per the plan. However, I chose to hold the position because by that point, my position had become so large that if I closed it, it might have triggered further price decline to $190, leading to a market collapse. I also briefly fantasized about a short-term bounce after the support was breached, which was a very dangerous mindset.

Furthermore, after the price broke below $200, I again added leverage in the $187 to $193 range, further increasing my position to $60 million (with a total leverage of 1.2x). This was clearly a wrong decision, but as you can see, the mistakes had already accumulated. Fortunately, the worst-case scenario did not materialize, and I did not suffer a massive loss.

What I Did Right

After reflection, I ultimately decided to cut losses when the unrealized loss was around $7-8 million. I reduced my position by 70% at $193, which gave me cash to prepare for bottom-fishing, and I successfully entered ETH, ENA, PEPE, and WIF near the final low.

Trade Conclusion

Ultimately, my unrealized loss was $6.2 million, a 10.2% loss. Since then, I have executed 13 trades with a 100% success rate, essentially making up for the previous loss.

I believe this is a very good example of how a trade can start out wrong and then just keep getting worse. Fortunately, I was able to navigate my way out, which allowed me to remain calm and execute precisely when the market bottomed.

However, this was the largest single-position loss on this account, and it is a lesson I will long remember.

Merry Christmas, folks.

Source
Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
Like
16
Add to Favorites
8
Comments