Last night, I made a small repositioning, clearly watching the price and placing a market order, but the execution kept sweeping upward, and the slippage woke me up. Looking back, it’s still the same old problem: the pool depth isn’t enough, I was too hasty in splitting the orders, and when I saw the first one didn’t fully fill, I impulsively added another, essentially helping others lift the market. In the future, I’d rather set limit orders to slowly accumulate or wait until the depth returns before acting; the rhythm is more important than “catching up.” Recently, the combined yield from staking and sharing safety has been criticized as a copycat scheme. I’m more worried about liquidity squeezing, with interest rates spiking and slippage rising together, making the liquidation line on the lending side impossible to withstand. First, keep control of order placement and positions, and don’t add unnecessary drama.

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