Tap to Trade in Gate Square, Win up to 50 GT & Merch!
Click the trading widget in Gate Square content, complete a transaction, and take home 50 GT, Position Experience Vouchers, or exclusive Spring Festival merchandise.
Click the registration link to join
https://www.gate.com/questionnaire/7401
Enter Gate Square daily and click any trading pair or trading card within the content to complete a transaction. The top 10 users by trading volume will win GT, Gate merchandise boxes, position experience vouchers, and more.
The top prize: 50 GT.
.
The good and the bad of adopting the remora strategy
Advantages are clear: Following big players significantly reduces cognitive effort. You don’t need to master complex technical analysis, understand economic cycles, or study project fundamentals. You just monitor and replicate.
Second, many of the moves generated by whales and sharks effectively create profitable trends. These actors have insider information, expertise, or simply enough capital to influence prices. If you manage to get in early in their direction, you can benefit from that same trend.
Third, the remora introduces its capital into movements that have already started, meaning the risk of “max error” is theoretically lower than for those initiating the trend.
Risks, however, are substantial: Not all whale movements result in sustainable trends. The market is full of false signals, pump and dumps, and manipulations. A whale may make a move for reasons completely different from what a remora assumes, and the asset can reverse quickly.
Additionally, most remoras enter late. When they finally detect the move and act, the price has already advanced significantly. They buy at the peak of the maneuver and sell when the trend reverses, leading to consistent losses.
Finally, the remora is entirely dependent. It has no control over the assets or the strategy; it is tied to the behavior of others. If a whale changes course or the market context shifts, the remora gets trapped without options for adaptation.
Key signals to be a successful remora
If you decide to adopt this approach, certain principles can improve your chances. First, speed is critical. The second to arrive at a wave has already missed part of the gain. You need tools and automatic alerts to notify you when important movements occur.
Second, you must validate the signal before acting blindly. Just because a whale moves doesn’t mean everyone should. Look for convergence: Is the volume really abnormal? Are other actors also positioning? Is there technical or fundamental context supporting the move?
Third, set loss limits. Successful remoras are those that recognize when the “wave” no longer has direction and exit before it completely reverses.
Final reflection
Being a remora in the market is a reality for many investors, and it’s not inherently “bad.” However, it’s not a guaranteed strategy. Big players are not infallible, signals can be misread, and timing is brutally important. A successful remora combines vigilance, speed, signal validation, and disciplined risk management. Those who ignore these elements will simply follow others into predictable losses. The key, then, is not to become a remora but an intelligent remora that understands exactly what it is following and why.