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The market is currently experiencing one of the strongest periods of fear in recent years. The
Crypto Fear & Greed Index is sitting at
16 out of 100, placing it firmly in
Extreme Fear territory. These levels are rare and usually appear when the majority of market participants are convinced that prices will continue falling.
This is exactly when people tend to make their most emotional decisions.
📈 I’ve been in crypto for
13 years. During that time, Bitcoin has gone through
around seven major corrections of more than 50%. Every one of them was accompanied by panic, headlines declaring “Bitcoin is dead,” and the widespread belief that it would never recover. Yet every single time, the market eventually recovered and went on to set new all-time highs.
🧠 I used to panic during major market crashes too. But those moments taught me one of the most valuable lessons:
emotions almost always lead to poor decisions. Today, I rely on logic and a predefined strategy instead of fear.
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The most memorable example happened to me in March 2020. After reaching its previous all-time high near
$20,000, Bitcoin crashed to around
$3,850 during the COVID panic. The fear back then was even stronger than it is today. It genuinely felt like the market was over.
💰 I had a buy order waiting at around
$4,200, and it was fully filled. Later I sold my Bitcoin at around
$7,000, feeling proud that I had caught a great rebound. Only afterward did I realize I had bought almost at the exact bottom. Bitcoin then moved above
$10,000, broke its previous all-time high above
$20,000, and continued climbing much higher.
📊 When the majority believes the market can only go lower, it often begins preparing for a move in the opposite direction.
That doesn’t mean the reversal will happen immediately, but periods of extreme fear have historically created some of the best opportunities.
⚡ The market is currently heavily loaded with short positions.
A sharp move higher could trigger a chain reaction. Stop-losses would be hit, leveraged positions would be liquidated, and that could accelerate the rally even further.
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How do I personally approach situations like this?
🟢 I prefer
building my position gradually instead of trying to catch the exact bottom. I rarely commit all my capital at once and usually spread my entries across multiple price levels. This approach helps me stay calm during corrections and stick to my strategy.
✅ If I use leverage,
I never go above 2x. That means using no more than one borrowed dollar for every dollar of my own capital. In my experience, this provides enough room to survive deep corrections without facing a quick liquidation.
❤️ Personally, if I use leverage, I prefer perpetual futures. Under certain market conditions, they can be cheaper to hold than borrowing funds on the spot market.
I’ll explain how funding works and why it matters in one of my upcoming articles.
😵 From there, everything depends on your strategy. Some investors simply accumulate Bitcoin for the long term and wait for the next growth cycle. Others use major corrections to trade short-term rebounds.
😂
After thirteen years in crypto, I’ve learned one simple lesson: the biggest losses aren’t caused by the market itself, but by excessive leverage and panic. Once a position becomes too large, emotions take over. That’s when most traders either close their positions at the worst possible moment or end up getting liquidated.
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I don’t know where the exact bottom is. And neither does anyone else. But after thirteen years in crypto, I’ve learned one more thing:
the best investments of my life were made when most people were simply too afraid to buy.
❓
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