Post
Topic
Board Speculation
Merits 1 from 1 user
Re: Buy Buy Buy or Sell Sell Sell?
by
DubemIfedigbo001
on 22/04/2025, 05:57:35 UTC
⭐ Merited by JayJuanGee (1)
Maybe you are still not clear with the meaning of buying aggressively. Every bitcoin purchase is advised to be made from the discretionary income, now the quantity of the discretionary income you invest into bitcoin with respect to the total discretionary income is what determines your level of aggressiveness, if you invest very little quantity, let's say 30% of your discretionary income, you can be said to be whimpy and are less aggressive compared to the person who invests 50%, which is in turn less aggressive than a person that invests 60% of their total discretionary income into bitcoin. Agressiveness in purchasing bitcoin shows seriousness when it is not over done.

Aggressiveness is good, but Ruthlessness is going very extreme without reservation or boundary and this might even entail investing more than only your discretionary income into bitcoin which might include money supposed to be utilized for expenses and it can be termed being overly aggressive and instead of being helpful, it is a disastrous approach to accumulating bitcoin and I would not be supporting any investor, not just a newbie to go that route.
What you described as less aggressive, aggressive and overly aggressive should also be dependent on individuals discretionary income per total income periodically. When a person earns an amount which allows him $500 discretionary income weekly his 30% is $150 50%=$250 and 60%=$300. When you compare with someone whose weekly discretionary income is $200, his 30% is $60, his 50%=$100 while his 60%=$120.
This is same with what I said, My statement clearly specified it's investor specific and the percentages are applied to their total discretionary income. Every committed investor buys periodically, so discretionary income and aggressiveness applies to the point of purchase. It is also very good to have a benchmark of purchase, but if the investor works with a constant percentage of their discretionary income being invested into bitcoin, then on increase of their discretionary income, it will also suggest an increase in his buying amount.

Quote
Now describing aggressiveness by percentage is practically ironous as even a person's 100% may not amount to another person's 10%. What really matters is your consistency and fairness. As your discretionary income rises, it is advisable to also boost your emergency funds alongside your investments fund. DCA principles is still the best and a wage receiver, your monthly income is very documented and could allow anyone for proper planning. In cases of a sudden increase in income leading to a surplus discretionary income, investment by lump-sum is advised based on the consequent discretionary income rise.

Buying aggressively when there's no pay-rise could endanger your investments and could lead you into loss when things go sour.
If you understood my points clearly, you'll know that I'm not laying my comparison across investors financial strengths, but with the percentage of discretionary income every investor in question is prepared to invest into bitcoin. It might interest you that investor A who has $150 every week and invests $90 into bitcoin is described as being more aggressive than investor B who has $1000 and ends up investing only $400 into bitcoin. This does not mean in any way that investor A would have more bitcoin than investor B since the buying amount of investor B is larger, but surely investor A is showing more dedication and seriousness by being more aggressive in his accumulation journey.