In today’s session, I focused on short, high-frequency scalps on NIGHT/USDT, executing multiple market entries and exits within a tight time window. The data shows a consistent pattern: buy orders filled around 0.04413 and sell orders executed near 0.04412. While the price difference appears minimal, this reflects a classic micro-scalping strategy where speed and precision matter more than large price swings.
Analyzing the trade flow, each position size stayed around 1,130 units, maintaining consistency in exposure. This is important because it controls risk and avoids over-leveraging during volatile micro-movements. The rapid sequence of buy → sell → buy → sell within seconds indicates strong focus on liquidity and order book behavior rather than trend prediction.
From a performance perspective, this approach relies heavily on execution efficiency and low trading fees. Even a slight delay or higher spread could turn these trades unprofitable. That’s why discipline and timing are critical. I wasn’t chasing pumps—instead, I reacted to small fluctuations with a predefined plan.
Key takeaway: micro-scalping is not about predicting the market, but about reacting faster than others while managing risk tightly. Today’s data reinforces that consistency, not luck, drives results. Small wins, repeated with discipline, build long-term trading success.

