1. What determines the return on investment of a coin?
For example, say I bought a coin for 2 dollars (say 500 dollars worth). I see it now go to 2 dollars and 2 cents, but for some reason, if I were to sell it now, it would be for less than 500 dollars (I saw a negative return on investment i.e. red). That confused me since despite being red, the price is still higher than what I bought it at.
2. Similar to 1. Say I bought a coin while it was valued at 2 dollars. Say I bought 500 dollars worth so 250 of them. Why is it that if it goes up by say .05 usd and I decide to sell, it doesn't sell at 512.5 (250x2.05)?
Learn how an order book works retard it's not that complicated
Austin Richardson
If you're going to be useless, shut your faggot mouth up.
Wyatt Taylor
I like this angle OP. You really do a good job fudding literally anything shilled on this board (link) by pretending to be a fucking moron in general asking for advice. Nice!
Kayden Nguyen
>by pretending to be a fucking moron in general asking for advice Is english your second language? And you're calling me the retard?
Eli Howard
trading fee?
or are you doing market sells instead of limit sells
Chase Stewart
Limit orders. I don't mean the fee.
Bentley Edwards
whoever shopped this is a fucking genius.
only true OGs know the original photo
Daniel Carter
Trust me, if you can't reconcile what you're doing in the order book with what ends up in your account, you are def a retard.
Carter Butler
it's an
OPPORTUNITY TO BUY LOW
when you see RED you BUY when you see GREEN you sell