Playing contracts? First, engrave these 8 iron laws on your forehead

Contracts are like licking blood from a knife's edge; some lick blood, while others lick meat. The difference lies in these 8 points:

1. After a stop loss, keep your mouth shut $BTC

Getting swept in stop losses repeatedly can drive a person crazy—either they start opening positions in a frenzied revenge or they go into complete self-isolation. The correct approach: stop, calm down, and review. The market is still there; losing the capital is the real end.

2. Slow is fast, fast is death

Don't dream of getting rich overnight. When losing, the worst thing is to recklessly go all-in; that’s not a comeback, it’s a death sentence. Preserve your capital to have a chance to turn things around.

3. Don’t go against the trend

In a one-sided market, going against the trend is asking for trouble. Both beginners and veterans make this mistake, thinking "it has risen too much, it should fall now." What’s the result? The trend cures all disobedience. See the direction clearly, go with the flow, and don’t be the fool trying to stop a chariot with your bare hands. $BNB

4. If the risk-reward ratio is less than 2:1, don’t open a position

A business that earns 1 dollar and loses 2 dollars cannot win mathematically. For every trade, the profit potential must be at least twice the risk; that’s the bottom line.

5. An itchy hand is a disease, it must be treated

Frequent trading is a graveyard for beginners. The market doesn’t lack opportunities; it lacks capital. Not a master? Then control your hand, with a maximum of 1-2 trades a day.

6. Only earn money you understand

If you don’t understand the market, no matter how big the fluctuations are, it’s someone else’s feast. Outside your cognitive boundary, there are only traps.

7. Holding positions = seeking death

A stop loss is like buying insurance; holding positions is like running naked. Especially for beginners, holding a position could directly lead to losing everything. Remember: a wrong stop loss is a temporary mistake, a wrong hold is a lifetime error.

8. When feeling buoyant, you’re not far from liquidation

Continuous profits can easily inflate one’s ego; once inflated, they over-leverage, and once they over-leverage, they go to zero. When profitable, be even more cautious.

Playing contracts is about human nature, not technology. Only by controlling yourself can you survive.

In the past, you moved forward in the market in the dark alone; now the light is with me, and I keep it shining. Follow Sister Yue to take you 🚀🚀🚀 #BTC行情 #币安