You know the Peter Lynch cocktail theory. So I created an alternative theory to Hodlers. I call it "Patient Theory." It's my personal opinion, of course, but it's based on experience. 😁
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Patient coming to the emergency room with a complaint that has been present for months: The group that does not know from which sources to find the necessary investment information
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A patient who comes to the emergency room with a mosquito bite, etc: Group capable of panic selling.
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Patient coming to the emergency room after a specialist visit and wants confirm a prescription: Group discussing the advice received from an investment advisor with noobs.
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The patient who says they have been waiting for an hour, 2 minutes after arriving: An impatient group that wants to make a quick profit.
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The patient who says I have this and that and who refuses to say actual problem: Investment genius, economist (😄)
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The patient who asks for an IV: Group asking for fish, persistently refusing to learn how to fish
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Patients who have shortness of breath but cannot quit smoking: The group that is attached to a single idea and cannot go back on their decision even if the loss grows
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Patients who are really urgent, who come to the emergency room and neglect post-treatment follow-ups: The group that knows how to reverse a bad decision but cannot sustain it
And last but not least;
9) Smart Investor: Patients who come with urgent complaints, go for regular check-ups after receiving treatment, and do not neglect their medication: The group that will succeed with the investment made with this meticulousness. They do not look at the price every minute, they follow decent sources. They does not believe every news, does not panic, but does not lose control and tolerates it. Buys at low points and does not sell at high points, hodls like a degen.