Posts  / #POST-234162
REDDIT

Is it just me, or is "doing nothing" becoming a more profitable strategy than active trading lately?

I’ve been looking at my PnL from the last few weeks of this sideways chop, and honestly, the conclusion is a bit bruising for my ego: I would have been much better off if I had just stayed in stables.

In a market like this, it feels like overtrading is just a hidden tax. You end up forcing entries, second-guessing every 2% move, and the trading fees slowly eat you alive while the stress eats your sleep.

I used to think that "Earn" products or just parking in USDT was "boring" or for people who didn't know how to read a chart. But now I'm starting to get it, in a crab market, boring is a feature, not a bug. My current shift in logic:

Lower Stress: Fewer decisions mean fewer chances to mess up.

Capital Preservation: Putting idle USDT into a flexible/fixed earn setup feels much cleaner than letting it sit in a spot account where I'm tempted to "revenge trade" every time I see a green candle.

Dry Powder: It keeps the funds ready for a real move, rather than having them tied up in a bag that's down 15% because I tried to catch a fake-out.

I’m curious how you are handling this mental game. Are you still grinding the 15m/1h charts, or have you moved a chunk of your bankroll into "sit-and-wait" mode?

At what point does the "need to trade" become more of a liability than an asset?