Contract trading: Staying alive is more important than anything else.

The contract poker table has always seen more smiles coming in and tears going out. I still remember my foolishness the first time I encountered contracts—holding 8000U as capital, my eyes glued to the K-line on the screen, I accidentally opened a 100x leverage position with a shaky hand.

 

As a result, the market didn't even create a decent wave, and after fifteen minutes, half of my capital evaporated along with the red numbers. That day, I stared blankly at the screen, not even noticing that the smoke had burned to the filter, with only one thought left in my mind: it turns out that liquidation is not just a story, but a warning for all greedy newcomers.

 

Since then, I have truly submitted to the market. No longer dreaming of "doubling overnight," and I will never let adrenaline make decisions for my brain.

 

I have seen too many people stumble: some who made a little money became so elated that they lost their way, going all in every day, resulting in three liquidations in a week; some were blinded by losses, staring at the screen until four in the morning, eventually dragged into a bottomless pit by their emotions. In fact, contracts are not gambling at all; it's a practice to see who can better control their hands and manage risks.

 

Real trading involves waiting seventy percent of the time. During last year's ETH market, I relied on the BOLL indicator to wait for opportunities.

 

While others were tossing and turning on the intraday charts, I only focused on key signals: patiently waiting when the track was narrowing, and once it opened and broke through the middle track with volume, I entered in batches along the trend, firmly setting stop-loss at the previous low. After three weeks, I secured thirty times the profit. This is not luck; it's the confidence built from strict discipline.

 

Now I have established three strict rules for myself: a single loss must not exceed 2%, no more than two orders a day, and take out the principal immediately when floating profits reach 50%.

 

Does it sound rigid? But it is this "rigidity" that allows me to stand firm amid countless market fluctuations.

 

The market is never short of brave warriors; it lacks wise ones who can survive. If you are still trading based on feelings, being led by the market, it might be better to stop and calm down first—if you want to make big money, you must first learn not to be liquidated.

#Federal Reserve March Interest Rate Meeting

Nice to meet everyone, Ming is focused on $ETH and $BTC contract spot ambush, the team still has positions available, hop on quickly, and let me help you become a dealer and also a winner @铭哥带单日记