#ETH巨鲸增持 From 1500U to 56,000U? Sounds unbelievable, but the method is actually ridiculously simple.
Many people ask me how to leverage small amounts of money for profits. To be honest, there’s no secret—just divide the money into three parts and stick to the rules.
Split the principal into three parts.
I use 500U specifically for intraday short trading. I only focus on one position each day, aiming to make a profit of 3%-5% before stopping, and I never drag things out. Assets like $BR are the most suitable because they have enough volatility but are not excessively violent.
Another 500U is reserved for swing trading. When the market is sideways, I just relax and wait for a volume breakout before taking action, aiming directly for over 12%, to capture the juiciest part in the middle.
The last 500 U is "lifesaving money", which I usually don't touch at all. It is only when extreme market conditions arise that I will use this money to buy the dip or hedge. This is for survival, not for gambling.
80% of the time is spent waiting, and 20% of the time is spent doing.
Market conditions are mostly frustrating. The more eager you are to act, the more likely you are to be cut. My habit is: rest during sideways movements, and strike hard when the trend is clear.
Every time the account profit reaches 20% of the principal, I will immediately withdraw 30%. The money in hand counts, the numbers on the books are just illusions.
A master is never someone who stares at the market every day, but rather someone who knows when to act and when to be patient.
Rules are a thousand times more reliable than emotions.
I set three deadlines for myself: a unified stop loss of 2%, which automatically closes the position when triggered; take half the position off when profits reach 4%, and set the remaining to breakeven; never add to a losing position, as the more you average down, the faster you will die.
It’s not me trading; it’s this set of rules executing on my behalf. Allowing emotions to get involved is essentially digging a pit for oneself.
Risk must be locked in for profits to run.
From 1500U to 28,000U, and then to 56,000U, it actually only requires two things: control the risk to the extreme, and then let the profits roll on their own.
The market is always there, but you only have one chance with your bullets. Protecting your principal is more important than anything else.
Most people keep losing not because they don't work hard enough, but because they haven't found the right direction. When the direction is right, even a small amount of capital can grow into a large number.
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ServantOfSatoshi
· 10h ago
Simply put, it's about discipline and patience—nothing magical. The key is not to be hijacked by emotions.
View OriginalReply0
SoliditySurvivor
· 12-01 16:21
It's easier said than done; how many can truly stick to this trap?
View OriginalReply0
MetaMisfit
· 12-01 16:20
To put it bluntly, this trap of the three-part method is indeed clichéd but effective. The key is still that saying - only the money in hand counts, everything else is nonsense.
View OriginalReply0
TokenomicsTherapist
· 12-01 16:16
That's right, that's the reasoning. Most people fail because of their mindset; once the rules loosen, everything falls apart.
View OriginalReply0
LiquidationWizard
· 12-01 16:03
Damn, I've been using this trap allocation logic for a long time, it's just that too many people can't control their greed.
#ETH巨鲸增持 From 1500U to 56,000U? Sounds unbelievable, but the method is actually ridiculously simple.
Many people ask me how to leverage small amounts of money for profits. To be honest, there’s no secret—just divide the money into three parts and stick to the rules.
Split the principal into three parts.
I use 500U specifically for intraday short trading. I only focus on one position each day, aiming to make a profit of 3%-5% before stopping, and I never drag things out. Assets like $BR are the most suitable because they have enough volatility but are not excessively violent.
Another 500U is reserved for swing trading. When the market is sideways, I just relax and wait for a volume breakout before taking action, aiming directly for over 12%, to capture the juiciest part in the middle.
The last 500 U is "lifesaving money", which I usually don't touch at all. It is only when extreme market conditions arise that I will use this money to buy the dip or hedge. This is for survival, not for gambling.
80% of the time is spent waiting, and 20% of the time is spent doing.
Market conditions are mostly frustrating. The more eager you are to act, the more likely you are to be cut. My habit is: rest during sideways movements, and strike hard when the trend is clear.
Every time the account profit reaches 20% of the principal, I will immediately withdraw 30%. The money in hand counts, the numbers on the books are just illusions.
A master is never someone who stares at the market every day, but rather someone who knows when to act and when to be patient.
Rules are a thousand times more reliable than emotions.
I set three deadlines for myself: a unified stop loss of 2%, which automatically closes the position when triggered; take half the position off when profits reach 4%, and set the remaining to breakeven; never add to a losing position, as the more you average down, the faster you will die.
It’s not me trading; it’s this set of rules executing on my behalf. Allowing emotions to get involved is essentially digging a pit for oneself.
Risk must be locked in for profits to run.
From 1500U to 28,000U, and then to 56,000U, it actually only requires two things: control the risk to the extreme, and then let the profits roll on their own.
The market is always there, but you only have one chance with your bullets. Protecting your principal is more important than anything else.
Most people keep losing not because they don't work hard enough, but because they haven't found the right direction. When the direction is right, even a small amount of capital can grow into a large number.