Raoul Pal has been in crypto long enough to have made the mistake himself. In a recent episode of The Journeyman, he laid out the rules he wishes he’d followed from day one, and the one that sits above everything else is deceptively simple.
“The greatest mistake in crypto isn’t bad timing. It’s touching a position you should have held forever,” he said.
Most people read that and think it’s about selling too early. It’s not. According to Pal it’s about something more specific and more damaging, the act of interfering with a position at all. Checking it obsessively. Rebalancing it. Taking partial profits because the number felt good. Rotating into something that sounded better. Moving it between wallets during a moment of fear. Every one of those actions is a touch. And every touch is a new decision point where human judgment, which is fallible, emotional, and easily manipulated by narrative, gets inserted into what was originally a clean thesis.
According to Pal, the person who bought Bitcoin in 2020, put it in cold storage, and genuinely forgot about it likely outperformed almost every active trader who watched the charts daily over the same period. Not because they were smarter or timed anything correctly, but because they removed themselves from the equation entirely. Their only decision was the first one. Everything after that was just time doing its work.
What makes Pal’s observation particularly sharp is the environment he’s describing it in. Crypto is specifically engineered to make you touch your position. The market runs 24 hours a day, seven days a week, with no closing bell to force a pause. Price moves that would take months in equities happen in hours. The community actively rewards people who are loudly repositioning, the person who sold the top and bought the bottom gets celebrated, which creates a social incentive to be visibly active even when inaction is the correct move.
Add to that the constant flow of new narratives. A better chain. A faster protocol. A more institutional asset. An emerging sector that’s about to outperform everything. Each one of those narratives is a reason to touch the position, to rotate, to rebalance, to upgrade. Most of them turn out to be wrong in hindsight. But they’re compelling in the moment, which is exactly when the damage gets done.
The greatest mistake in crypto isn't bad timing. It's touching a position you should have held forever.
In this episode of The Journeyman, I lay out how I invest in crypto and the rules I wish I'd followed from day one. As ever, please enjoy! pic.twitter.com/FdNnpQFbr9
— Raoul Pal (@RaoulGMI) May 28, 2026
This is where Pal’s thesis goes deeper than standard investment advice. He’s not describing a failure of analysis. He’s describing a failure of behavior. In his view, you knew the position was good when you entered it. The thesis was sound. The asset was right. And then something happened, fear, greed, boredom, a more exciting story, a scary headline, and you touched it. In Pal’s framing, the position didn’t fail you. You failed the position.
The rules he says he wishes he’d followed from day one aren’t complicated. They’re just hard to follow in real time. Don’t touch what you don’t need to touch. Don’t let short-term noise override a long-term thesis you believed in when you were thinking clearly. Recognize that the urge to act is often the market’s way of separating you from your best positions.
In Pal’s view, most traders spend years trying to get better at timing entries and exits when the better use of that energy is getting better at doing nothing, at holding the position you already have, through the moments that make holding feel impossible, until time proves the original thesis right or genuinely wrong.
In his framing, the greatest mistake isn’t missing the bottom or selling before the top. It’s selling a position you should have held forever because the market made you feel like you had to do something.
The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
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