Someone started with a principal of 1200U and rolled it over to 29,000U in three months, and now the account remains stable at over 58,000U. The key point is - there was never a liquidation throughout the process. This is not luck; there is a strategy behind it.
**First, let's talk about position management.** 1200U is not just a single bet, but rather divided into three parts: 400U for short-term quick trades to capture fluctuations; 400U to hold for a swing, waiting for a big market movement; the remaining 400U serves as ballast. Many people lose because they go ALL IN; preserving the principal is essential for future opportunities.
**Let's talk about trading rhythm.** K-line spends about 80% of the time consolidating, and frequently opening orders during this period is just giving fees to the exchange. When it's time to endure, you must endure; strike accurately when the trend arrives. Profit exceeding 20%? Withdraw 30% first to secure profits; unrealized gains on the account are not real.
**Discipline is key.** Cut losses at 2% without hesitation; take profits at 4% to secure gains, without being greedy; never increase your position to average down when losing—this is the rhythm of giving away money. Emotions can deceive, but rules do not.
This logic applies to mainstream coins like Bitcoin and Ethereum. Small coins are too volatile and are not suitable for beginners to practice.
The market is always there, but once the principal is gone, there really are no opportunities left.
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AirdropDreamer
· 23h ago
The wind is quite strong, the key is whether you can withstand the pullback without losing your composure.
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StrawberryIce
· 23h ago
You’re right, I’m just afraid that after reading this article, someone will go back and go ALL IN, and then blame the market for not giving them a chance. Discipline is really much harder to come by than technique.
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BlockImposter
· 23h ago
This guy can roll from 1200 to 58,000 without blowing up, damn it, I also want to learn this trap discipline, especially the part about patience. I used to frequently open trades just because my mind was messed up.
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ChainDetective
· 23h ago
Damn, 1200U rolled to 58,000, how much self-discipline does this require? I'm still hovering on the edge of loss.
Saw a practical case, worth pondering.
Someone started with a principal of 1200U and rolled it over to 29,000U in three months, and now the account remains stable at over 58,000U. The key point is - there was never a liquidation throughout the process. This is not luck; there is a strategy behind it.
**First, let's talk about position management.**
1200U is not just a single bet, but rather divided into three parts: 400U for short-term quick trades to capture fluctuations; 400U to hold for a swing, waiting for a big market movement; the remaining 400U serves as ballast. Many people lose because they go ALL IN; preserving the principal is essential for future opportunities.
**Let's talk about trading rhythm.**
K-line spends about 80% of the time consolidating, and frequently opening orders during this period is just giving fees to the exchange. When it's time to endure, you must endure; strike accurately when the trend arrives. Profit exceeding 20%? Withdraw 30% first to secure profits; unrealized gains on the account are not real.
**Discipline is key.**
Cut losses at 2% without hesitation; take profits at 4% to secure gains, without being greedy; never increase your position to average down when losing—this is the rhythm of giving away money. Emotions can deceive, but rules do not.
This logic applies to mainstream coins like Bitcoin and Ethereum. Small coins are too volatile and are not suitable for beginners to practice.
The market is always there, but once the principal is gone, there really are no opportunities left.