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加密珂姐

公众号:【链上祥哥】 职业稳健型交易员,现货合约做了八年,汇聚顶级资源,擅长洞悉市场脉络,实时追踪国际行情,每日分享实时资讯和成功秘诀。关注,赢在起跑线上!
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从破产到 3000 万:8 年币圈逆袭 2016 年公司倒闭那天,我攥着仅剩的 5 万元,在交易所徘徊了整整一周 ​ 最终孤注一掷全仓买入 8 枚比特币,均价 6000 元 —— 这是我最后的救命稻草。 ​ 2017 年比特币开启疯狂牛市,全年涨幅飙升 1700%,我的账户一路飙至 80 万 ​ 盯着屏幕上跳动的数字,我彻夜难眠,以为财富自由唾手可得。但 2018 年泡沫破裂,加密市场总市值缩水 70%,我的余额骤跌至 18 万。那个深夜我终于醒悟:浮盈只是数字,落袋才是真钱​ ​ 2020 年,我彻底告别追涨杀跌,转向挖矿与 DeFi 深耕。三年后,账户稳稳躺着 300 万。常有人问我抓过多少百倍币,我笑答:“币圈生存的核心是控风险。”8 年血与泪沉淀的三条铁律,今天全部分享:​ ​ 第一铁律:保本就是赚,本金在机会就在。​ ​ 2021 年山寨币疯涨时,我跟风买过某代币,涨幅达 50% 立刻抽出本金。后来它暴跌 90%,我靠 “利润奔跑” 仍有盈余。币圈从不缺机会,但本金没了,就彻底出局 ​ 第二铁律:只赚看得懂的钱,认知决定收益 ​ 白皮书、团队、代币经济,有一项不懂就放弃。2019 年 IEO 热潮时我按兵不动,躲过后续崩盘;2021 年 Layer2 兴起前,我提前半年深研 SKALE 等项目的弹性侧链技术,重仓布局后收获数倍红利 ​ 第三铁律:仓位比择时更重要,分散是护身符 ​ 我坚守 “6211 法则”:60% 投比特币与以太坊(二者占市场 65% 以上市值)作压舱石;20% 布局主流公链;10% 试错新赛道;10% 留现金应急。单个币种不超 15% 仓位,让我在熊市仅回撤 12% ​ 如今比特币从 12.6 万跌至 9.4 万,山寨币腰斩成片,更印证铁律价值。牛市克制,熊市囤货,真正的赢家从不是赌徒,而是用规则驾驭周期的人。​ ​ 行情每天都有,守住本金与本心,下轮周期你也能逆袭。#特朗普缓和局势 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
从破产到 3000 万:8 年币圈逆袭

2016 年公司倒闭那天,我攥着仅剩的 5 万元,在交易所徘徊了整整一周

最终孤注一掷全仓买入 8 枚比特币,均价 6000 元 —— 这是我最后的救命稻草。

2017 年比特币开启疯狂牛市,全年涨幅飙升 1700%,我的账户一路飙至 80 万

盯着屏幕上跳动的数字,我彻夜难眠,以为财富自由唾手可得。但 2018 年泡沫破裂,加密市场总市值缩水 70%,我的余额骤跌至 18 万。那个深夜我终于醒悟:浮盈只是数字,落袋才是真钱​

2020 年,我彻底告别追涨杀跌,转向挖矿与 DeFi 深耕。三年后,账户稳稳躺着 300 万。常有人问我抓过多少百倍币,我笑答:“币圈生存的核心是控风险。”8 年血与泪沉淀的三条铁律,今天全部分享:​

第一铁律:保本就是赚,本金在机会就在。​

2021 年山寨币疯涨时,我跟风买过某代币,涨幅达 50% 立刻抽出本金。后来它暴跌 90%,我靠 “利润奔跑” 仍有盈余。币圈从不缺机会,但本金没了,就彻底出局

第二铁律:只赚看得懂的钱,认知决定收益

白皮书、团队、代币经济,有一项不懂就放弃。2019 年 IEO 热潮时我按兵不动,躲过后续崩盘;2021 年 Layer2 兴起前,我提前半年深研 SKALE 等项目的弹性侧链技术,重仓布局后收获数倍红利

第三铁律:仓位比择时更重要,分散是护身符

我坚守 “6211 法则”:60% 投比特币与以太坊(二者占市场 65% 以上市值)作压舱石;20% 布局主流公链;10% 试错新赛道;10% 留现金应急。单个币种不超 15% 仓位,让我在熊市仅回撤 12%

如今比特币从 12.6 万跌至 9.4 万,山寨币腰斩成片,更印证铁律价值。牛市克制,熊市囤货,真正的赢家从不是赌徒,而是用规则驾驭周期的人。​

行情每天都有,守住本金与本心,下轮周期你也能逆袭。#特朗普缓和局势 $ETH
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2016 年公司倒闭,我揣着仅剩的 5 万块,在小区楼下的网吧泡了一周看 K 线,最后闭眼全仓买了 8 枚比特币 —— 那时谁能想到,这堆 “看不见摸不着的代码”,能让我 8 年后账户躺进 3000 万。​ 但别羡慕,我早把 “暴富神话” 戒了 2017 年比特币疯涨时,我账户冲到 80 万,梦想着“年底换豪车”,结果 2018 年暴跌到 18 万,豪车梦碎得比玻璃还脆 从那以后我才明白,币圈活下去比赚快钱重要一万倍 这 8 年踩过的坑,攒出 3 个普通人也能照搬的干货,没有废话:​ 第一招:本金比脸重要,盈利 50% 先把本钱拿出来 2021 年跟风买过个山寨币,刚涨 50% 我就抽回本金,剩下的利润随便它折腾。后来这币跌得只剩零头,我反倒赚了点零花钱 记住,平台跑路、代币归零都常见,本金在,下次还能捞回来 ​ 第二招:看不懂的钱,给座金山也不碰。别信 “内幕消息”“百倍币推荐”,我只看三样:白皮书能不能看明白、团队有没有公开履历、代币是不是随便增发 2019 年 IEO 热潮时,圈里天天喊 “错过拍断腿”,我因看不懂项目逻辑没跟风,后来那些项目全跑路了 第三招:仓位别梭哈,按 “6211” 分好钱。我的钱永远这么放:60% 买比特币、以太坊,这俩是老大哥,再跌也跌不到哪儿去; 20% 投主流公链;10% 拿点小钱试新赛道,亏了不心疼;10% 留现金,万一暴跌还能补点仓。单个币种绝不超过 15%,睡踏实觉比啥都强 还有个保命细节:只用 Coinbase、OKX 这种有正规牌照的大平台,冷钱包助记词记在纸上,绝不用手机截图。去年我邻居就是截图存网盘,几万块一夜没了 币圈从不是赌场,是 “幸存者游戏”。没有谁靠运气一直赢,那些笑到最后的,都是把风险攥在自己手里的人 行情每天都有,慢慢来,稳一点,你想要的,时间都会给你#特朗普缓和局势 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
2016 年公司倒闭,我揣着仅剩的 5 万块,在小区楼下的网吧泡了一周看 K 线,最后闭眼全仓买了 8 枚比特币

—— 那时谁能想到,这堆 “看不见摸不着的代码”,能让我 8 年后账户躺进 3000 万。​

但别羡慕,我早把 “暴富神话” 戒了

2017 年比特币疯涨时,我账户冲到 80 万,梦想着“年底换豪车”,结果 2018 年暴跌到 18 万,豪车梦碎得比玻璃还脆

从那以后我才明白,币圈活下去比赚快钱重要一万倍

这 8 年踩过的坑,攒出 3 个普通人也能照搬的干货,没有废话:​
第一招:本金比脸重要,盈利 50% 先把本钱拿出来

2021 年跟风买过个山寨币,刚涨 50% 我就抽回本金,剩下的利润随便它折腾。后来这币跌得只剩零头,我反倒赚了点零花钱

记住,平台跑路、代币归零都常见,本金在,下次还能捞回来

第二招:看不懂的钱,给座金山也不碰。别信 “内幕消息”“百倍币推荐”,我只看三样:白皮书能不能看明白、团队有没有公开履历、代币是不是随便增发

2019 年 IEO 热潮时,圈里天天喊 “错过拍断腿”,我因看不懂项目逻辑没跟风,后来那些项目全跑路了

第三招:仓位别梭哈,按 “6211” 分好钱。我的钱永远这么放:60% 买比特币、以太坊,这俩是老大哥,再跌也跌不到哪儿去;

20% 投主流公链;10% 拿点小钱试新赛道,亏了不心疼;10% 留现金,万一暴跌还能补点仓。单个币种绝不超过 15%,睡踏实觉比啥都强

还有个保命细节:只用 Coinbase、OKX 这种有正规牌照的大平台,冷钱包助记词记在纸上,绝不用手机截图。去年我邻居就是截图存网盘,几万块一夜没了

币圈从不是赌场,是 “幸存者游戏”。没有谁靠运气一直赢,那些笑到最后的,都是把风险攥在自己手里的人

行情每天都有,慢慢来,稳一点,你想要的,时间都会给你#特朗普缓和局势 $ETH
For 8 years of trading coins without playing with superstitions, I relied solely on the word 'stability', rolling from 50,000 to 31,000,000. I also helped over 90 loyal fans not lose their principal, with the most following me multiplying their investment by 4 times. What impressed me the most was the market panic in 2022, where fans were anxious to cut their losses and exit. I strongly advised them to split their spare money into 12 parts, investing monthly in BTC and ETH, and I suggested that everyone keep 30% of their funds in a trading platform's flexible wealth management, ultimately not only avoiding losses but also earning 28% by year-end. A fan later told me, "Following you isn't about making quick money; it's about having confidence." Here are 3 practical tips that even a fool can implement, without discussing cycles, just focusing on practical operations: When selecting coins, only look at 3 categories: mainstream coins within the top 20 by market capitalization (prioritize BTC/ETH), top platform tokens (BNB/OKB), and absolutely avoid altcoins without whitepapers or teams, reducing the risk of stepping on landmines by 90%. Ironclad stop-loss rules: never exceed 10% of your portfolio in a single coin, set a 5% stop-loss upon purchase, take profit by selling half at a 12% gain, and use a trailing stop-loss for the remaining (liquidate if profit retraces by 3%), don’t cling to the fantasy of "just a bit more increase." Low-risk passive income: keep USDT in the trading platform's flexible wealth management, earning an annualized return of 3%-5% with on-demand access; invest a fixed amount monthly in mainstream coins regardless of price fluctuations to average costs, making it super easy. In these 8 years in the crypto space, I've seen too many people chasing hundred-fold coins lose everything, whereas those who follow the rules gradually make money. In fact, the logic of making money has never been difficult; the challenge lies in overcoming greed and fear. The market is never short of opportunities, but it lacks those who can remain calm. Remember, those who make big money in the crypto world are never gamblers; they are the ones who execute simple rules to perfection. Invest with spare money, control risks with discipline, and it’s okay to be slow; being stable will lead you far. Those seemingly insignificant small gains will accumulate over time, ultimately giving you returns beyond expectations. #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
For 8 years of trading coins without playing with superstitions, I relied solely on the word 'stability', rolling from 50,000 to 31,000,000.

I also helped over 90 loyal fans not lose their principal, with the most following me multiplying their investment by 4 times.

What impressed me the most was the market panic in 2022, where fans were anxious to cut their losses and exit.

I strongly advised them to split their spare money into 12 parts, investing monthly in BTC and ETH, and I suggested that everyone keep 30% of their funds in a trading platform's flexible wealth management, ultimately not only avoiding losses but also earning 28% by year-end. A fan later told me, "Following you isn't about making quick money; it's about having confidence."

Here are 3 practical tips that even a fool can implement, without discussing cycles, just focusing on practical operations:

When selecting coins, only look at 3 categories: mainstream coins within the top 20 by market capitalization (prioritize BTC/ETH), top platform tokens (BNB/OKB), and absolutely avoid altcoins without whitepapers or teams, reducing the risk of stepping on landmines by 90%.

Ironclad stop-loss rules: never exceed 10% of your portfolio in a single coin, set a 5% stop-loss upon purchase, take profit by selling half at a 12% gain, and use a trailing stop-loss for the remaining (liquidate if profit retraces by 3%), don’t cling to the fantasy of "just a bit more increase."

Low-risk passive income: keep USDT in the trading platform's flexible wealth management, earning an annualized return of 3%-5% with on-demand access; invest a fixed amount monthly in mainstream coins regardless of price fluctuations to average costs, making it super easy.

In these 8 years in the crypto space, I've seen too many people chasing hundred-fold coins lose everything, whereas those who follow the rules gradually make money.

In fact, the logic of making money has never been difficult; the challenge lies in overcoming greed and fear. The market is never short of opportunities, but it lacks those who can remain calm.

Remember, those who make big money in the crypto world are never gamblers; they are the ones who execute simple rules to perfection.

Invest with spare money, control risks with discipline, and it’s okay to be slow; being stable will lead you far.

Those seemingly insignificant small gains will accumulate over time, ultimately giving you returns beyond expectations. #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 $ETH
Is your principal less than 5000U? Read this before placing an order. Brothers whose capital hasn't reached 5000U, stop and don't operate, listen to my honest advice. The crypto world is not a market for betting, it’s a battlefield that requires rules. The less capital you have, the more stable you must be; rushing to recover losses will only wipe out your remaining funds. Last year, I mentored a newbie who had only 600U in his account. He was trembling when he placed his first order, repeatedly asking me, "What if it drops right after I buy?" afraid that his money would go down the drain. I told him, "Don’t panic, follow the rules, and even small amounts can grow." To my surprise, six months later, his account surged to 26,000U, and he never blew up his position once. Some say it’s luck, but it’s really supported by three iron rules. The first rule is to divide the money into three parts: 300U for day trading, only focus on BTC and ETH, take profits at a 2% fluctuation without being greedy; 200U for swing trading, wait for clear signals to act, holding positions for 3 to 4 days for stability; the remaining 100U as a safety net, no matter how extreme the market is, don’t touch it. This is the confidence to turn things around. I’ve seen too many people go all in with 600U, getting overly excited with a 2-point rise and eager to leverage, panicking and cutting losses at the slightest dip, they simply can’t go far. This young man also almost went off track at the beginning; one time he wanted to add his safety money into the mix, but I snapped him back to reality—real winners know to leave themselves an exit strategy. The second rule is to only follow trends and not get caught in fluctuations. The market spends 80% of the time in sideways movement, frequent trading just means paying fees to the platform. If there are no signals, sit back and enjoy tea; when there are signals, act decisively. Take out half of the profits at 12%, securing profits is more reliable. When he first made 12% profit, he excitedly came to share the news. I told him to take out half first; although he hesitated, he did it, and later, it indeed retraced. He said he feels anxious just thinking about it now. The most crucial is the third rule: rules are more effective than emotions. Never let a single stop loss exceed 1.2%, and exit when it reaches the point; if profits exceed 2.5%, cut the position in half and let the remaining profits run; never average down on losses. There was one time he didn’t set a stop loss and lost 1.5%. I scolded him harshly, and after that, he started cutting positions when the time was up and never got stuck in deep losses again. Having little capital is not scary; what’s scary is always thinking about "a big turnaround". Rolling 600U to 26,000U isn’t based on luck; it’s about having the patience to wait for opportunities and sticking to the rules without being impulsive. Now, he tells everyone, "Thanks to my rules," but in reality, I just helped him control his urge to make chaotic trades. #特朗普缓和局势 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
Is your principal less than 5000U? Read this before placing an order.

Brothers whose capital hasn't reached 5000U, stop and don't operate, listen to my honest advice.

The crypto world is not a market for betting, it’s a battlefield that requires rules. The less capital you have, the more stable you must be; rushing to recover losses will only wipe out your remaining funds.

Last year, I mentored a newbie who had only 600U in his account. He was trembling when he placed his first order, repeatedly asking me, "What if it drops right after I buy?" afraid that his money would go down the drain.

I told him, "Don’t panic, follow the rules, and even small amounts can grow." To my surprise, six months later, his account surged to 26,000U, and he never blew up his position once.

Some say it’s luck, but it’s really supported by three iron rules.

The first rule is to divide the money into three parts: 300U for day trading, only focus on BTC and ETH, take profits at a 2% fluctuation without being greedy;

200U for swing trading, wait for clear signals to act, holding positions for 3 to 4 days for stability; the remaining 100U as a safety net, no matter how extreme the market is, don’t touch it. This is the confidence to turn things around.

I’ve seen too many people go all in with 600U, getting overly excited with a 2-point rise and eager to leverage, panicking and cutting losses at the slightest dip, they simply can’t go far.

This young man also almost went off track at the beginning; one time he wanted to add his safety money into the mix, but I snapped him back to reality—real winners know to leave themselves an exit strategy.

The second rule is to only follow trends and not get caught in fluctuations.

The market spends 80% of the time in sideways movement, frequent trading just means paying fees to the platform. If there are no signals, sit back and enjoy tea; when there are signals, act decisively. Take out half of the profits at 12%, securing profits is more reliable.

When he first made 12% profit, he excitedly came to share the news. I told him to take out half first; although he hesitated, he did it, and later, it indeed retraced. He said he feels anxious just thinking about it now.

The most crucial is the third rule: rules are more effective than emotions. Never let a single stop loss exceed 1.2%, and exit when it reaches the point; if profits exceed 2.5%, cut the position in half and let the remaining profits run; never average down on losses.

There was one time he didn’t set a stop loss and lost 1.5%. I scolded him harshly, and after that, he started cutting positions when the time was up and never got stuck in deep losses again.

Having little capital is not scary; what’s scary is always thinking about "a big turnaround".

Rolling 600U to 26,000U isn’t based on luck; it’s about having the patience to wait for opportunities and sticking to the rules without being impulsive.

Now, he tells everyone, "Thanks to my rules," but in reality, I just helped him control his urge to make chaotic trades. #特朗普缓和局势 $ETH
“The bear market has started” — No one is refuting this now, but looking at this decline, I am a bit confused: it's only been a month and it's so severe. If the bear market really lasts a year, will it end up at zero? What makes me even more vigilant is the long-short ratio, which is frighteningly high, indicating a bunch of people are busy trying to catch the bottom. To be honest, I would rather wait until the trend is completely clear before taking action, rather than being a “bag holder.” I firmly believe it will continue to decline, and it’s not just a wild guess. First, the four-year cycle has completely ended, with daily, weekly, and monthly lines all breaking down, and the trend is incredibly weak — this is the hardest signal. Secondly, it’s even more contradictory that even though the market is in such a panic, the funding rates for BTC and ETH perpetual contracts are still positive — surprisingly, the bulls still hold the mainstream, this bubble hasn't been fully squeezed out. Take the time BTC broke below $100,000; the rebound was so weak it was like it hadn’t eaten, and it still hasn’t climbed back above $100,000 — this momentum doesn’t look like it’s going to reverse. There’s also a big shock: the U.S. may attack Venezuela, and there’s no telling if a big country will intervene; if a war breaks out, who would still dare to enter a high-risk market? Big capital is just watching, what are we small traders rushing in for? What annoys me the most is social media, where a bunch of people are shouting “great opportunity to catch the bottom.” How many times in BTC's history has there been extreme panic, only to have a small rebound and then fall back into the abyss? The reversal signal in my heart is very clear: no one is shouting to catch the bottom anymore, the volume ratio of ETH perpetual contracts is lower than that of BTC, and the mainstream spot trading volume continues to hit bottom — only then is it worth fighting for a small rebound. At this position, if you really want to enter the market, you can only try a small position in spot trading, and the stop-loss line must be strictly defined — in case of an extreme drop, those coin and stock companies will have to liquidate, and during a cascade, there’s no escape. There’s also a particularly painful detail: after October 11th, liquidity has been decreasing, new entrants are all withdrawing, and funds are only flowing out, with no hope of recovery in the short term. To be honest, trading is too exhausting now; I want to catch the bottom but am afraid of being trapped, and I want to short but am afraid of missing out. But the more chaotic it gets, the more we must stick to discipline, and not be led by FOMO emotions. Before the trend reverses, “waiting” is the best strategy. As long as those voices shouting “catch the bottom” haven’t disappeared, we can just be “bystanders” and preserving capital is more important than anything else. #特朗普缓和局势 #美伊和谈陷僵局 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
“The bear market has started” — No one is refuting this now, but looking at this decline, I am a bit confused: it's only been a month and it's so severe.

If the bear market really lasts a year, will it end up at zero?

What makes me even more vigilant is the long-short ratio, which is frighteningly high, indicating a bunch of people are busy trying to catch the bottom.

To be honest, I would rather wait until the trend is completely clear before taking action, rather than being a “bag holder.”

I firmly believe it will continue to decline, and it’s not just a wild guess. First, the four-year cycle has completely ended, with daily, weekly, and monthly lines all breaking down, and the trend is incredibly weak — this is the hardest signal.

Secondly, it’s even more contradictory that even though the market is in such a panic, the funding rates for BTC and ETH perpetual contracts are still positive — surprisingly, the bulls still hold the mainstream, this bubble hasn't been fully squeezed out.

Take the time BTC broke below $100,000; the rebound was so weak it was like it hadn’t eaten, and it still hasn’t climbed back above $100,000 — this momentum doesn’t look like it’s going to reverse.

There’s also a big shock: the U.S. may attack Venezuela, and there’s no telling if a big country will intervene; if a war breaks out, who would still dare to enter a high-risk market? Big capital is just watching, what are we small traders rushing in for?

What annoys me the most is social media, where a bunch of people are shouting “great opportunity to catch the bottom.” How many times in BTC's history has there been extreme panic, only to have a small rebound and then fall back into the abyss?

The reversal signal in my heart is very clear: no one is shouting to catch the bottom anymore, the volume ratio of ETH perpetual contracts is lower than that of BTC, and the mainstream spot trading volume continues to hit bottom — only then is it worth fighting for a small rebound.

At this position, if you really want to enter the market, you can only try a small position in spot trading, and the stop-loss line must be strictly defined — in case of an extreme drop, those coin and stock companies will have to liquidate, and during a cascade, there’s no escape.

There’s also a particularly painful detail: after October 11th, liquidity has been decreasing, new entrants are all withdrawing, and funds are only flowing out, with no hope of recovery in the short term.

To be honest, trading is too exhausting now; I want to catch the bottom but am afraid of being trapped, and I want to short but am afraid of missing out.

But the more chaotic it gets, the more we must stick to discipline, and not be led by FOMO emotions. Before the trend reverses, “waiting” is the best strategy.

As long as those voices shouting “catch the bottom” haven’t disappeared, we can just be “bystanders” and preserving capital is more important than anything else. #特朗普缓和局势 #美伊和谈陷僵局 $ETH
This year I'm 34 years old, which means I've been immersed in the cryptocurrency world for a full 8 years. I entered the market at 26 with the tens of thousands I had saved, witnessing the madness of Bitcoin's skyrocketing, and enduring the sleepless nights of contract liquidation. Now I can finally enjoy life steadily, living a bit easier than many of my peers in traditional industries. People often come over and ask, “Are you exceptionally talented?” Not at all. From 2020 to 2024, my account has genuinely surpassed 8 digits, not because of luck, but because of my “343 phase investment method” that I stumbled upon. It sounds clumsy, but it has helped me consistently earn over 20 million. For instance, with Bitcoin, if I have a principal of 120,000, the first step is to invest 30%—36,000. When I first entered the market, I also chased highs and cut losses, fully invested to the point of losing sleep, but later I learned that small positions are a calming pill; only when I hold the risk in my hands can I calmly judge. The second step is to steadily increase my position by 40%, which is the most grueling yet crucial step. I never chase during a rise, instead I wait for a pullback to add; and I don’t panic when it drops, adding 10% to my position for every 10% drop. Last year when BTC fell, everyone around me was cutting losses, but I followed my rules to add to my position, lowering my average cost, and felt particularly grounded watching my account fluctuate. For the last 30%, I had to wait until the trend was completely stable before diving in. So many people fall for the “fear of missing out,” gambling without clarity on the trend, and end up becoming bag holders. I once rushed to increase my position in haste, only to watch it get stuck for three months, and that lesson made me firmly remember the importance of “waiting.” This method isn’t clever at all, but the hardest part of the crypto world isn’t finding “god operations,” it’s enduring greed and fear. I’ve seen too many people chasing shortcuts, losing their down payment overnight, while I steadily move forward with this “silly method” when others chase highs and sell lows. #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
This year I'm 34 years old, which means I've been immersed in the cryptocurrency world for a full 8 years.

I entered the market at 26 with the tens of thousands I had saved, witnessing the madness of Bitcoin's skyrocketing, and enduring the sleepless nights of contract liquidation.

Now I can finally enjoy life steadily, living a bit easier than many of my peers in traditional industries.

People often come over and ask, “Are you exceptionally talented?” Not at all.

From 2020 to 2024, my account has genuinely surpassed 8 digits, not because of luck, but because of my “343 phase investment method” that I stumbled upon. It sounds clumsy, but it has helped me consistently earn over 20 million.

For instance, with Bitcoin, if I have a principal of 120,000, the first step is to invest 30%—36,000.

When I first entered the market, I also chased highs and cut losses, fully invested to the point of losing sleep, but later I learned that small positions are a calming pill; only when I hold the risk in my hands can I calmly judge.

The second step is to steadily increase my position by 40%, which is the most grueling yet crucial step.

I never chase during a rise, instead I wait for a pullback to add; and I don’t panic when it drops, adding 10% to my position for every 10% drop.

Last year when BTC fell, everyone around me was cutting losses, but I followed my rules to add to my position, lowering my average cost, and felt particularly grounded watching my account fluctuate.

For the last 30%, I had to wait until the trend was completely stable before diving in. So many people fall for the “fear of missing out,” gambling without clarity on the trend, and end up becoming bag holders.

I once rushed to increase my position in haste, only to watch it get stuck for three months, and that lesson made me firmly remember the importance of “waiting.”

This method isn’t clever at all, but the hardest part of the crypto world isn’t finding “god operations,” it’s enduring greed and fear.

I’ve seen too many people chasing shortcuts, losing their down payment overnight, while I steadily move forward with this “silly method” when others chase highs and sell lows.
#特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 $ETH
From 50,000 to 1,230,000 U, it took me two years When I entered the crypto world with a principal of 50,000, I was like many brothers now, staring at the market until dawn, frantically chasing highs and cutting losses like a headless fly, and in less than half a year, I lost almost half of it. It wasn't until I stepped on enough pits that I figured out a method so simple that even a fool could learn it, and after two years, my account steadily lay at 1,230,000 U. It's not that I'm hiding anything; a few fans I previously guided with this method have now all broken six figures. Especially coins like $MYX and $BEAT, following the strategy has hardly ever failed. The core is just four steps, all derived from my money-burning experiences. The first step in choosing coins is just two words: take it seriously. Open the daily chart and only look for coins with MACD golden crosses, prioritizing golden crosses above the zero line—this is what I concluded after losing twenty thousand; this pattern can have a success rate as high as eighty percent. Don't be greedy; watching three to five coins a day is enough; anything more is hard to manage. For buying and selling, just watch a daily moving average; this is my lifeline. If the coin price is above the line, hold it; if it breaks, run immediately, don't hesitate. Last time with $BEAT, I held it for half a month, and suddenly one day it opened low and broke the line; my heart sank at that moment, my hands trembled, but I still gritted my teeth and cleared my position. Later, it indeed dropped by 20%, and thinking back on it now still scares me. Position management needs to be flexible. If the coin price breaks the moving average and the trading volume follows, go all in. —Such opportunities are rare; catching one is enough to last a while. When selling, don’t think about selling at the highest point; if it rises by 40%, sell one-third; if it rises by 80%, sell another third; keep the rest around the moving average, and clear if it breaks. The most critical thing is to stop losses; this is the bottom line. Once with $MYX, I made a bit of profit and got cocky, thinking “maybe it will bounce” when it broke the moving average, and ended up losing 15% in a day. Since then, I've set hard rules for myself: as long as it breaks the line, no matter how the market is doing or how good the news is, sell immediately. This method looks simple, but the difficult part is execution. When the market fluctuates, my heart races like a drum, and wanting to be greedy or scared is common. But remember, the money made in the crypto world is “against human nature.” I am Yaya; if you are still blindly messing around, feel free to come talk to me anytime; taking fewer detours is better than anything else #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
From 50,000 to 1,230,000 U, it took me two years

When I entered the crypto world with a principal of 50,000, I was like many brothers now, staring at the market until dawn, frantically chasing highs and cutting losses like a headless fly, and in less than half a year, I lost almost half of it.

It wasn't until I stepped on enough pits that I figured out a method so simple that even a fool could learn it, and after two years, my account steadily lay at 1,230,000 U.

It's not that I'm hiding anything; a few fans I previously guided with this method have now all broken six figures.

Especially coins like $MYX and $BEAT, following the strategy has hardly ever failed. The core is just four steps, all derived from my money-burning experiences.

The first step in choosing coins is just two words: take it seriously.

Open the daily chart and only look for coins with MACD golden crosses, prioritizing golden crosses above the zero line—this is what I concluded after losing twenty thousand; this pattern can have a success rate as high as eighty percent.

Don't be greedy; watching three to five coins a day is enough; anything more is hard to manage.

For buying and selling, just watch a daily moving average; this is my lifeline. If the coin price is above the line, hold it; if it breaks, run immediately, don't hesitate.

Last time with $BEAT, I held it for half a month, and suddenly one day it opened low and broke the line; my heart sank at that moment, my hands trembled, but I still gritted my teeth and cleared my position. Later, it indeed dropped by 20%, and thinking back on it now still scares me.

Position management needs to be flexible. If the coin price breaks the moving average and the trading volume follows, go all in.

—Such opportunities are rare; catching one is enough to last a while. When selling, don’t think about selling at the highest point; if it rises by 40%, sell one-third; if it rises by 80%, sell another third; keep the rest around the moving average, and clear if it breaks.

The most critical thing is to stop losses; this is the bottom line. Once with $MYX, I made a bit of profit and got cocky, thinking “maybe it will bounce” when it broke the moving average, and ended up losing 15% in a day. Since then, I've set hard rules for myself: as long as it breaks the line, no matter how the market is doing or how good the news is, sell immediately.

This method looks simple, but the difficult part is execution. When the market fluctuates, my heart races like a drum, and wanting to be greedy or scared is common.

But remember, the money made in the crypto world is “against human nature.” I am Yaya; if you are still blindly messing around, feel free to come talk to me anytime; taking fewer detours is better than anything else #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 $ETH
While others are panicking and cutting losses, I am slowly picking up chips. Last night, my phone kept vibrating, it was a message from little Zhou who just entered the circle: "Yaya, the coins I bought at full margin have dropped again, my principal is almost half gone, how can it quickly rise back?" Looking at the screen, I can imagine his appearance—eyes bloodshot, fingers hovering over the "cut loss" button, afraid of losing it all but also worried about further drops. Who hasn't been through this scene? Those who actually make money in the crypto world never rely on the courage of "a single throw of the dice." Last week, the market dropped 15%, and the chat group exploded with cries of "it's going to crash," with some clearing out their positions overnight, but I added to mine. It's not that I'm bold; I've been waiting for this pullback for almost two weeks. Do you think the experts are gambling? In fact, they are waiting for signals. I panic when watching the market too, seeing the K-line drop, my palms are sweaty. But no matter how panicked I get, I won't act rashly—first, I check if the previous support level is stable, then calculate the risk I can bear. There's a strict rule I’ve never broken: only use 10%-20% of my position to test the waters. Even if I'm wrong, I can cut losses in time with a maximum loss of 2%, which doesn't hurt my foundation; If I'm right, I can ride the entire wave of the market. Previously, when Ethereum pulled back to 1800, I added to my position in three batches, and now that it has risen back, my account has directly increased by six figures. Every day in the square, there are people cursing; it's either getting stuck after chasing highs or cutting losses at lows. To be honest, those who chase breakthroughs essentially take on others' positions; those who cut losses the moment it drops will never buy at a bargain. Those who can remain calm during a pullback have already beaten most people. The crypto world is not short of opportunities; what’s lacking is the mindset of "being clear-headed when others are panicking." The last time Bitcoin dropped to 20,000, some despaired and uninstalled the software, but I followed my plan and added to my position; now that it has risen back to 40,000, those who once cursed are coming back to ask, "Can we still get in?" Next time you encounter a big drop, don't rush to ask, "Should we run?" First, ask yourself: Is the support level stable? Is the position safe enough? Is it time to bend down and pick up chips? Trading is not about impulse; it's about method. Once you realize that "waiting is more important than daring to rush," making money will come easily. #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
While others are panicking and cutting losses, I am slowly picking up chips.

Last night, my phone kept vibrating, it was a message from little Zhou who just entered the circle: "Yaya, the coins I bought at full margin have dropped again, my principal is almost half gone, how can it quickly rise back?"

Looking at the screen, I can imagine his appearance—eyes bloodshot, fingers hovering over the "cut loss" button, afraid of losing it all but also worried about further drops. Who hasn't been through this scene?

Those who actually make money in the crypto world never rely on the courage of "a single throw of the dice." Last week, the market dropped 15%, and the chat group exploded with cries of "it's going to crash," with some clearing out their positions overnight, but I added to mine.

It's not that I'm bold; I've been waiting for this pullback for almost two weeks.

Do you think the experts are gambling? In fact, they are waiting for signals. I panic when watching the market too, seeing the K-line drop, my palms are sweaty.

But no matter how panicked I get, I won't act rashly—first, I check if the previous support level is stable, then calculate the risk I can bear.

There's a strict rule I’ve never broken: only use 10%-20% of my position to test the waters. Even if I'm wrong, I can cut losses in time with a maximum loss of 2%, which doesn't hurt my foundation;

If I'm right, I can ride the entire wave of the market. Previously, when Ethereum pulled back to 1800, I added to my position in three batches, and now that it has risen back, my account has directly increased by six figures.

Every day in the square, there are people cursing; it's either getting stuck after chasing highs or cutting losses at lows. To be honest, those who chase breakthroughs essentially take on others' positions; those who cut losses the moment it drops will never buy at a bargain. Those who can remain calm during a pullback have already beaten most people.

The crypto world is not short of opportunities; what’s lacking is the mindset of "being clear-headed when others are panicking." The last time Bitcoin dropped to 20,000, some despaired and uninstalled the software, but I followed my plan and added to my position; now that it has risen back to 40,000, those who once cursed are coming back to ask, "Can we still get in?"

Next time you encounter a big drop, don't rush to ask, "Should we run?" First, ask yourself: Is the support level stable? Is the position safe enough? Is it time to bend down and pick up chips?

Trading is not about impulse; it's about method. Once you realize that "waiting is more important than daring to rush," making money will come easily. #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 $ETH
After 8 years in cryptocurrency, the phrase I often say is: "It's not luck that allowed me to take my followers from 800U to 230,000U; it's the skill to survive. " Last week, a long-time follower shared that by following my rules, he turned his wife's secret stash from 500U to 30,000U. This is how the cryptocurrency world should be – even with a small principal, you can still make steady progress. The cryptocurrency market is a jungle, and a small principal is like a seedling. Don't expect to grow into a towering tree overnight; first, learn to withstand the storms. When I introduced A Kai to the market in 2022, he rushed to open a position with 800U, but I locked his account: "First learn not to blow up your account, then we can talk about making money." Three months later, he multiplied his investment by 30 times, and the secret lies in these three iron rules. 1. Divide your money into three parts and leave a way out. 150U for short-term trading, only trade BTC/ETH, take profits immediately at a 3% fluctuation, never get attached to the battle; 250U for swing trading, wait for a breakout on the daily chart before entering, holding for a maximum of 5 days; 400U as a rescue fund, even in extreme cases, do not touch it. This is the capital for making a comeback. Those who go all in are buried in a bear market; leaving some reserves is essential for survival. 2. Follow the trend, don't engage in sideways markets. The market spends 70% of its time in a sideways trend, and frequent operations just mean paying transaction fees to the exchange. You must wait for dual signals to enter: a continuous increase in volume on the 15-minute candlestick chart + a golden cross on the daily MACD; if you miss one of the two conditions, do not act. Take 12% profit and move half to your wallet; set a stop profit for the remaining, it’s better to be slow than to chase high prices. 3. Discipline locks the hands, emotions cage the mind. My strict requirement for followers: if a single trade loses 2%, close the position immediately, the software exits automatically; if profits reach 4%, take half off, and set a 3% trailing stop for the rest. Never increase your position on losing trades; don’t hold onto the fantasy of "waiting for a pullback." You can misread the market, but you cannot break discipline. Some ask if 500U can turn things around? I have seen too many people start with a few hundred U and eventually stabilize. Having a small principal is not a shortcoming; rushing to double it is. In 8 years, I have witnessed countless tears from blown accounts and have accompanied many people from novices to veterans. Remember: In the cryptocurrency world, it's not about who makes money quickly; it's about who lasts longer. Keep "leave a way out, wait for the trend, and maintain discipline" on your screen, and recite it whenever your hands get itchy. I’ve been holding the lamp for 8 years, and it is still shining; it all depends on whether you are willing to keep up with #特朗普缓和局势 #美伊和谈陷僵局 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
After 8 years in cryptocurrency, the phrase I often say is: "It's not luck that allowed me to take my followers from 800U to 230,000U; it's the skill to survive.

" Last week, a long-time follower shared that by following my rules, he turned his wife's secret stash from 500U to 30,000U. This is how the cryptocurrency world should be – even with a small principal, you can still make steady progress.

The cryptocurrency market is a jungle, and a small principal is like a seedling. Don't expect to grow into a towering tree overnight; first, learn to withstand the storms.

When I introduced A Kai to the market in 2022, he rushed to open a position with 800U, but I locked his account: "First learn not to blow up your account, then we can talk about making money." Three months later, he multiplied his investment by 30 times, and the secret lies in these three iron rules.

1. Divide your money into three parts and leave a way out.

150U for short-term trading, only trade BTC/ETH, take profits immediately at a 3% fluctuation, never get attached to the battle; 250U for swing trading, wait for a breakout on the daily chart before entering, holding for a maximum of 5 days;

400U as a rescue fund, even in extreme cases, do not touch it. This is the capital for making a comeback. Those who go all in are buried in a bear market; leaving some reserves is essential for survival.

2. Follow the trend, don't engage in sideways markets.

The market spends 70% of its time in a sideways trend, and frequent operations just mean paying transaction fees to the exchange. You must wait for dual signals to enter: a continuous increase in volume on the 15-minute candlestick chart + a golden cross on the daily MACD; if you miss one of the two conditions, do not act.

Take 12% profit and move half to your wallet; set a stop profit for the remaining, it’s better to be slow than to chase high prices.

3. Discipline locks the hands, emotions cage the mind.

My strict requirement for followers: if a single trade loses 2%, close the position immediately, the software exits automatically; if profits reach 4%, take half off, and set a 3% trailing stop for the rest.

Never increase your position on losing trades; don’t hold onto the fantasy of "waiting for a pullback." You can misread the market, but you cannot break discipline.

Some ask if 500U can turn things around? I have seen too many people start with a few hundred U and eventually stabilize.

Having a small principal is not a shortcoming; rushing to double it is. In 8 years, I have witnessed countless tears from blown accounts and have accompanied many people from novices to veterans.

Remember: In the cryptocurrency world, it's not about who makes money quickly; it's about who lasts longer. Keep "leave a way out, wait for the trend, and maintain discipline" on your screen, and recite it whenever your hands get itchy.

I’ve been holding the lamp for 8 years, and it is still shining; it all depends on whether you are willing to keep up with #特朗普缓和局势 #美伊和谈陷僵局 $ETH
Eight years of cryptocurrency trading: a transformation from ignorance to steady profits In 2016, I came across cryptocurrency trading by chance. At that time, some people around me made money from it, and I impulsively invested all my savings of 20,000 yuan. At first, I knew nothing and blindly followed others to buy, resulting in losing more than half in just a few days. I was anxious but felt helpless. However, I didn't give up; instead, I began to learn frantically. Gradually, I discovered some practical tips. First, diversifying investments is key. Don't put all your funds into one cryptocurrency. I divided my funds into several parts, investing in different types of coins, including mainstream coins and potential altcoins. For example, I allocated part of my funds to relatively stable coins like Bitcoin, and another part to some innovative small coins. This way, even if one cryptocurrency performs poorly, others might bring returns, balancing the overall risk. Second, strictly set stop-loss and take-profit levels. Cryptocurrency trading is highly volatile; without stop-loss and take-profit levels, it's easy to give back profits or even incur more losses. I set a rule for myself: when each trade reaches a profit of 20%, I take some profits; if losses exceed 10%, I decisively cut losses. Once, I bought an altcoin that was performing well, and I didn't get greedy. I took profits as planned, and later that coin plummeted, allowing me to avoid a disaster. Third, stay calm and don't let emotions sway you. The market changes rapidly; seeing others make money shouldn't make you envious, and don't panic if you incur losses. Once, when the market plummeted, many people panicked and sold off. I calmly analyzed and found that the fundamentals of my coins hadn't changed, so I held on. Later, the market rebounded, and I reaped significant rewards. After eight years of trading cryptocurrencies, there have been gains and losses, but I have always been growing. Trading cryptocurrencies is like a marathon; it's not about who runs fast at the moment but about who can persist until the end. As long as we keep learning, mastering methods, and maintaining a good mindset, we can find our own space in this challenging market, reaping our own wealth and growth. #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
Eight years of cryptocurrency trading: a transformation from ignorance to steady profits

In 2016, I came across cryptocurrency trading by chance. At that time, some people around me made money from it, and I impulsively invested all my savings of 20,000 yuan.

At first, I knew nothing and blindly followed others to buy, resulting in losing more than half in just a few days. I was anxious but felt helpless.

However, I didn't give up; instead, I began to learn frantically. Gradually, I discovered some practical tips.

First, diversifying investments is key.

Don't put all your funds into one cryptocurrency. I divided my funds into several parts, investing in different types of coins, including mainstream coins and potential altcoins.

For example, I allocated part of my funds to relatively stable coins like Bitcoin, and another part to some innovative small coins.

This way, even if one cryptocurrency performs poorly, others might bring returns, balancing the overall risk.

Second, strictly set stop-loss and take-profit levels.

Cryptocurrency trading is highly volatile; without stop-loss and take-profit levels, it's easy to give back profits or even incur more losses.

I set a rule for myself: when each trade reaches a profit of 20%, I take some profits; if losses exceed 10%, I decisively cut losses.

Once, I bought an altcoin that was performing well, and I didn't get greedy. I took profits as planned, and later that coin plummeted, allowing me to avoid a disaster.

Third, stay calm and don't let emotions sway you.

The market changes rapidly; seeing others make money shouldn't make you envious, and don't panic if you incur losses.

Once, when the market plummeted, many people panicked and sold off. I calmly analyzed and found that the fundamentals of my coins hadn't changed, so I held on. Later, the market rebounded, and I reaped significant rewards.

After eight years of trading cryptocurrencies, there have been gains and losses, but I have always been growing. Trading cryptocurrencies is like a marathon; it's not about who runs fast at the moment but about who can persist until the end.

As long as we keep learning, mastering methods, and maintaining a good mindset, we can find our own space in this challenging market, reaping our own wealth and growth. #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 $ETH
Rolling Warehouse Practical Rules: I relied on these three points to roll from 300U to 100,000U In the past five years, I have taught many newcomers about rolling warehouses and summarized three "dead rules" that must not be broken, no matter how crazy the market gets, especially suitable for traders who are just starting with their capital: Capital Splitting Rule: Always leave half of the "backup money" Regardless of how much the capital increases, I insist on "half position opening" ——300U capital, 150U entering the market for trading, 150U kept as "fixed backup funds". This backup fund has two uses: one is to prevent extreme market "spikes", even if the 150U that entered the market triggers a stop loss, the backup fund remains, and the capital will not be halved; The second is to avoid "emotional averaging down"; many people can't help but use backup funds to increase their positions after a stop loss, directly blocking their "backup route". When profits are realized, for example, making 50U, the capital becomes 350U, I will re-split: 175U trading funds + 175U backup funds, always maintaining a 1:1 ratio, absolutely not breaking it. Profit Reinvestment Ratio: For example, if a trade made 10U, I will only take 7U to add to the "trading funds", leaving 3U to withdraw or convert to stablecoins. Doing this has two benefits: one is that the part of "realized profits" can enhance confidence; after all, having real money in hand is more solid than the numbers in the account; The second is to control risk; even if subsequent trades incur losses, it is only "a part of the profit," and it will not hurt the principal. Over the long term, your capital will roll like a "snowball," but no matter how big the snowball gets, the core of the "snow core" (original capital) is always safe. Stop Loss Retreat Mechanism: If wrong, "return to the original shape". Rolling warehouses are most afraid of "holding positions"; once a judgment error occurs, it must immediately "retreat to the safety line". My rule is: as long as a single trade incurs a stop loss, regardless of how much was earned before, immediately adjust the trading funds back to the previous "safety level". This step is particularly counterintuitive; many people feel that "if you lose, you must earn it back," but in the cryptocurrency world, "admitting defeat" is more sustainable than "stubbornly holding on". I have seen too many people who, because they did not retreat after a stop loss, end up losing more and more, turning rolling warehouses into "the prelude to liquidation". In the cryptocurrency world, "surviving" is never passive defense, but actively using discipline to build a "safety net". When others are eliminated by the market, your rolling warehouse can naturally amplify the winning rate #特朗普缓和局势 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
Rolling Warehouse Practical Rules: I relied on these three points to roll from 300U to 100,000U

In the past five years, I have taught many newcomers about rolling warehouses and summarized three "dead rules" that must not be broken, no matter how crazy the market gets, especially suitable for traders who are just starting with their capital:

Capital Splitting Rule: Always leave half of the "backup money" Regardless of how much the capital increases, I insist on "half position opening"

——300U capital, 150U entering the market for trading, 150U kept as "fixed backup funds".

This backup fund has two uses: one is to prevent extreme market "spikes", even if the 150U that entered the market triggers a stop loss, the backup fund remains, and the capital will not be halved;

The second is to avoid "emotional averaging down"; many people can't help but use backup funds to increase their positions after a stop loss, directly blocking their "backup route".

When profits are realized, for example, making 50U, the capital becomes 350U, I will re-split: 175U trading funds + 175U backup funds, always maintaining a 1:1 ratio, absolutely not breaking it.

Profit Reinvestment Ratio: For example, if a trade made 10U, I will only take 7U to add to the "trading funds", leaving 3U to withdraw or convert to stablecoins.

Doing this has two benefits: one is that the part of "realized profits" can enhance confidence; after all, having real money in hand is more solid than the numbers in the account;

The second is to control risk; even if subsequent trades incur losses, it is only "a part of the profit," and it will not hurt the principal.

Over the long term, your capital will roll like a "snowball," but no matter how big the snowball gets, the core of the "snow core" (original capital) is always safe.

Stop Loss Retreat Mechanism: If wrong, "return to the original shape". Rolling warehouses are most afraid of "holding positions"; once a judgment error occurs, it must immediately "retreat to the safety line".

My rule is: as long as a single trade incurs a stop loss, regardless of how much was earned before, immediately adjust the trading funds back to the previous "safety level".

This step is particularly counterintuitive; many people feel that "if you lose, you must earn it back," but in the cryptocurrency world, "admitting defeat" is more sustainable than "stubbornly holding on".

I have seen too many people who, because they did not retreat after a stop loss, end up losing more and more, turning rolling warehouses into "the prelude to liquidation".

In the cryptocurrency world, "surviving" is never passive defense, but actively using discipline to build a "safety net". When others are eliminated by the market, your rolling warehouse can naturally amplify the winning rate #特朗普缓和局势 $ETH
Now that the market is fluctuating, I can't help but dig out the 'black history' of 2021 That wave of day and night lines reversing the market played out the whole process from my confidence to collapse At the time, ETH was particularly strange, rising during the day and definitely falling at night, and after falling at night, it surely rebounded the next day, just like a programmed routine I was overjoyed then, wasn’t this the law of heaven feeding me? I quickly started opening positions in the opposite direction, and at first, it was quite regular, with stop losses set very strictly. After half a month, I earned a lot and walked with confidence But the bad part was a few 'false stop losses'. Clearly, the direction was right, but I was lightly swept out by the market, and as soon as I left, it immediately charged towards the target After several times, all my respect was gone, and I recklessly turned off the stop loss, secretly pleased: 'I’ve got this market figured out, stop losses are just unnecessary' The turning point came unexpectedly. One morning, I saw the night line had dropped enough, so I heavily bet on a long position, satisfied, and went to sleep, even setting an alarm for 11 o'clock to prepare to collect money As a result, as soon as the alarm rang, I opened the market software and was directly stunned — after the night line had dropped, the day line actually continued to crash, with the K line plummeting like a kite with a broken string I stared at my account balance, palms sweating, sitting from morning to afternoon, watching the losses expand little by little, and finally, unable to bear it any longer, I gritted my teeth and cut my losses With that cut, 30% of my position was gone, and now thinking back, it’s heart-wrenching. Later, upon reviewing, I realized that if I had held on, I would have likely been directly swept away by the market, with no chance to recover In fact, this kind of 'pattern' in trading is abundant; some people track the US stock market opening times, some focus on low liquidity during meal times. The ICT time zone logic itself is not an issue, but there are always people like me who, after making a little money, become complacent and forget that stop losses are the life-saving symbol Now I finally understand that being obsessed with win rates is self-deception. We are not relying on carrying trades to make a living; even if the win rate is only 10%, as long as the risk-reward ratio is high enough, we can still profit When the market is bad, don’t think about counter-trend bottom fishing; being able to survive and stay at the table is more important than anything The market has never lacked opportunities to make money; what it lacks is patience to withstand temptation and uphold the bottom line Those pitfalls and losses were not tuition fees paid in vain but rather a compass to help you understand the market's temperament Hold on to your stop losses and control your greed @Square-Creator-2af13cb11218e
Now that the market is fluctuating, I can't help but dig out the 'black history' of 2021

That wave of day and night lines reversing the market played out the whole process from my confidence to collapse

At the time, ETH was particularly strange, rising during the day and definitely falling at night, and after falling at night, it surely rebounded the next day, just like a programmed routine

I was overjoyed then, wasn’t this the law of heaven feeding me?

I quickly started opening positions in the opposite direction, and at first, it was quite regular, with stop losses set very strictly. After half a month, I earned a lot and walked with confidence

But the bad part was a few 'false stop losses'. Clearly, the direction was right, but I was lightly swept out by the market, and as soon as I left, it immediately charged towards the target

After several times, all my respect was gone, and I recklessly turned off the stop loss, secretly pleased: 'I’ve got this market figured out, stop losses are just unnecessary'

The turning point came unexpectedly. One morning, I saw the night line had dropped enough, so I heavily bet on a long position, satisfied, and went to sleep, even setting an alarm for 11 o'clock to prepare to collect money

As a result, as soon as the alarm rang, I opened the market software and was directly stunned — after the night line had dropped, the day line actually continued to crash, with the K line plummeting like a kite with a broken string

I stared at my account balance, palms sweating, sitting from morning to afternoon, watching the losses expand little by little, and finally, unable to bear it any longer, I gritted my teeth and cut my losses

With that cut, 30% of my position was gone, and now thinking back, it’s heart-wrenching. Later, upon reviewing, I realized that if I had held on, I would have likely been directly swept away by the market, with no chance to recover

In fact, this kind of 'pattern' in trading is abundant; some people track the US stock market opening times, some focus on low liquidity during meal times. The ICT time zone logic itself is not an issue, but there are always people like me who, after making a little money, become complacent and forget that stop losses are the life-saving symbol

Now I finally understand that being obsessed with win rates is self-deception. We are not relying on carrying trades to make a living; even if the win rate is only 10%, as long as the risk-reward ratio is high enough, we can still profit

When the market is bad, don’t think about counter-trend bottom fishing; being able to survive and stay at the table is more important than anything

The market has never lacked opportunities to make money; what it lacks is patience to withstand temptation and uphold the bottom line

Those pitfalls and losses were not tuition fees paid in vain but rather a compass to help you understand the market's temperament

Hold on to your stop losses and control your greed @加密珂姐
After the contract liquidation, I only have 120U left in my account. Others say this little money can't even make a splash, but I stubbornly relied on the dumbest method and slowly rolled it to 1 million. In the first stage, 120U to practice my mindset. I figured it out: I'm not afraid of losing everything anyway, and I can let go instead. I set four strict rules: only focus on BTC, a large and stable market, not affected by small funds; leverage at most 20 times, tried 100 times, panicked with a 0.5% fluctuation, mindset completely collapsed; each time only move 60U to open positions, leaving 60U to prevent price spikes; take profit at 10%, stop loss at 5%, at most two transactions a day, regardless of win or lose, I'm done for the day. On the first day, the first trade made 6U, the second trade was flat, no greed, just slowly accumulating. In the second stage, rolled to 320U and added discipline. With a bit more capital, the rules remain unchanged but more serious: still half-position operation, each time moving 160U; after making a profit, use the new capital to keep rolling, let the snowball grow by itself; once there's a stop loss, immediately return to 60U to open positions, never hold on stubbornly. One time BTC spiked for a stop loss, I didn't average down, honestly used 60U to start again, didn't let a small loss turn into a big loss. In the third stage, capture large market trends and dare to take heavy positions. After waiting for half a month, BTC retraced to MA60 with volume, I raised my position to 70%—224U entered, take profit set at 30%, stop loss reduced to 3%. This trade made 67U, capital reached 387U. Later, I captured a few waves of trends, slowly rolled to over 10,000 U, and then caught a big market wave, directly surged to 1 million. Actually, there are no special tricks, just three points: control risk, never put all your money in; abandon greed, take the profit when it's good, don't think about picking tops and bottoms; being able to admit mistakes, stop loss is not shameful, it's the ticket to survive. The hardest part in the crypto world is not understanding the market, but watching yourself. I used to be eager to double my money, but later I understood: slowly getting rich is the fastest way. #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 @Square-Creator-2af13cb11218e $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
After the contract liquidation, I only have 120U left in my account.

Others say this little money can't even make a splash, but I stubbornly relied on the dumbest method and slowly rolled it to 1 million.

In the first stage, 120U to practice my mindset. I figured it out: I'm not afraid of losing everything anyway, and I can let go instead.

I set four strict rules: only focus on BTC, a large and stable market, not affected by small funds;

leverage at most 20 times, tried 100 times, panicked with a 0.5% fluctuation, mindset completely collapsed;

each time only move 60U to open positions, leaving 60U to prevent price spikes; take profit at 10%, stop loss at 5%, at most two transactions a day, regardless of win or lose, I'm done for the day.

On the first day, the first trade made 6U, the second trade was flat, no greed, just slowly accumulating.

In the second stage, rolled to 320U and added discipline. With a bit more capital, the rules remain unchanged but more serious: still half-position operation, each time moving 160U;

after making a profit, use the new capital to keep rolling, let the snowball grow by itself; once there's a stop loss, immediately return to 60U to open positions, never hold on stubbornly.

One time BTC spiked for a stop loss, I didn't average down, honestly used 60U to start again, didn't let a small loss turn into a big loss.

In the third stage, capture large market trends and dare to take heavy positions.

After waiting for half a month, BTC retraced to MA60 with volume, I raised my position to 70%—224U entered, take profit set at 30%, stop loss reduced to 3%.

This trade made 67U, capital reached 387U. Later, I captured a few waves of trends, slowly rolled to over 10,000 U, and then caught a big market wave, directly surged to 1 million.

Actually, there are no special tricks, just three points: control risk, never put all your money in;

abandon greed, take the profit when it's good, don't think about picking tops and bottoms; being able to admit mistakes, stop loss is not shameful, it's the ticket to survive.

The hardest part in the crypto world is not understanding the market, but watching yourself.

I used to be eager to double my money, but later I understood: slowly getting rich is the fastest way. #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 @加密珂姐 $ETH
Surviving in the Cryptocurrency World: A Foolish Method from Losing 150,000 to Having a 10 Million Position "The sky is falling! I lost 150,000 in a year, what should I do?" I have heard this desperate shout countless times eight years ago, and it is still playing out in the cryptocurrency world today. With little capital, excitement when prices rise, insomnia when they fall, and a complete collapse of mentality when volatility hits—if you are stuck in this cycle, don’t rush to swipe away. I am 36 years old, a native of Sichuan, settled in Shenzhen, living with two apartments and a sports car, not relying on luck or talent. Eight years ago, I entered the market with a capital of 200,000, losing it all down to less than 50,000, and during that time, I relied on beer to numb my anxiety. What truly rewrote my fate is a "foolish method" gained from 2555 days of losses and liquidation, which allowed me to roll from a few tens of thousands to tens of millions, with one wave of bottom positions increasing 100 times in three months, directly achieving a leap in social class. Let’s break a truth: 90% of people in a bull market are still losing money, and the root cause is "random buying." My approach is very simple, focusing solely on one sector and keeping a close eye on the main upward trend. After the new narrative erupted, dissecting the leaders, supplementary rise logic, and emotional rhythm, capturing the right moment can yield full wave profits, which is much more reliable than bumping around randomly. "Buy new, don’t buy old" is a lesson learned through blood and tears. Low-priced old coins may seem like a "bargain," but in reality, they are mostly "corpses" that no one cares about. The market always chases new stories and new traffic; holding onto positions based on sentiment will only dig you deeper, and rationally chasing new opportunities is the way to survive. Contracts can be touched, but rules must be followed. I have earned eight figures through contracts and have also been liquidated countless times, summarizing three iron rules: never go all in, leverage should not exceed 5 times, and stop-loss should be as natural as breathing; if you can’t do this, stay far away. Cycles are an unavoidable iron law, with a four-year cycle, and the end of a bull market will clear out the fakes. Judging the peak is very simple: when delivery workers and barbers start asking, "Which coin can multiply ten times?" you know you are at the top of the mountain. A 95% drawdown in a bear market is enough to swallow everything; timely withdrawal is essential for survival. The cryptocurrency world never lacks opportunities; what is lacking is those who can endure until the opportunity arises. Instead of asking "Which coin can multiply ten times?" it’s better to first ask yourself: After a wave of 90% drawdown, can you still survive? Being able to endure, execute, and not fantasize is the ultimate code to traverse through bull and bear markets #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 @Square-Creator-2af13cb11218e $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
Surviving in the Cryptocurrency World: A Foolish Method from Losing 150,000 to Having a 10 Million Position

"The sky is falling! I lost 150,000 in a year, what should I do?" I have heard this desperate shout countless times eight years ago, and it is still playing out in the cryptocurrency world today.

With little capital, excitement when prices rise, insomnia when they fall, and a complete collapse of mentality when volatility hits—if you are stuck in this cycle, don’t rush to swipe away.

I am 36 years old, a native of Sichuan, settled in Shenzhen, living with two apartments and a sports car, not relying on luck or talent.

Eight years ago, I entered the market with a capital of 200,000, losing it all down to less than 50,000, and during that time, I relied on beer to numb my anxiety.

What truly rewrote my fate is a "foolish method" gained from 2555 days of losses and liquidation, which allowed me to roll from a few tens of thousands to tens of millions, with one wave of bottom positions increasing 100 times in three months, directly achieving a leap in social class.

Let’s break a truth: 90% of people in a bull market are still losing money, and the root cause is "random buying." My approach is very simple, focusing solely on one sector and keeping a close eye on the main upward trend.

After the new narrative erupted, dissecting the leaders, supplementary rise logic, and emotional rhythm, capturing the right moment can yield full wave profits, which is much more reliable than bumping around randomly.

"Buy new, don’t buy old" is a lesson learned through blood and tears. Low-priced old coins may seem like a "bargain," but in reality, they are mostly "corpses" that no one cares about.

The market always chases new stories and new traffic; holding onto positions based on sentiment will only dig you deeper, and rationally chasing new opportunities is the way to survive.

Contracts can be touched, but rules must be followed. I have earned eight figures through contracts and have also been liquidated countless times, summarizing three iron rules: never go all in, leverage should not exceed 5 times, and stop-loss should be as natural as breathing; if you can’t do this, stay far away.

Cycles are an unavoidable iron law, with a four-year cycle, and the end of a bull market will clear out the fakes.

Judging the peak is very simple: when delivery workers and barbers start asking, "Which coin can multiply ten times?" you know you are at the top of the mountain. A 95% drawdown in a bear market is enough to swallow everything; timely withdrawal is essential for survival.

The cryptocurrency world never lacks opportunities; what is lacking is those who can endure until the opportunity arises.

Instead of asking "Which coin can multiply ten times?" it’s better to first ask yourself: After a wave of 90% drawdown, can you still survive?

Being able to endure, execute, and not fantasize is the ultimate code to traverse through bull and bear markets #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 @加密珂姐 $ETH
Did the crash hurt your liver? It turns out the three "blood extraction pumps" are causing trouble, retail investors, don't rush to cut losses! The moment I opened the market software, I was directly stunned. The Nasdaq and Bitcoin plunged simultaneously, my holdings were all in the red, making me feel suffocated. I initially thought it was a black swan attack, but later realized, this was no accident; it was clearly three "capital harvesters" simultaneously at work, draining the market liquidity completely! The first one is the Treasury's "money-grabbing operation." $163 billion in treasury bonds was released in a pile; this isn’t financing, it’s basically the national team coming down hard to grab! As the risk-free interest rate rises, hot money all runs to buy treasury bonds. Who would still want to stay in these risk assets like cryptocurrencies and the stock market? My holdings were left behind to take a beating, falling without any spirit. The second one is even harsher, the Federal Reserve's "expectation killing." I had been hoping for interest rate cuts every day, but then a simple "not in a hurry to cut rates" turned the script upside down, it was basically a public slap in the face. Leveraged funds were scared into liquidating positions overnight, the liquidation orders crashed down like an avalanche, this isn’t a normal correction; it’s clearly funds trampling each other to escape. The coins in my hands plummeted all the way down, and there was no buying support even if I wanted to sell. The third one is the banks' "cash shortage crisis." The overnight interest rate soared to outrageous levels, banks were looking everywhere for cash to save themselves, where could there be leftover grain flowing into the crypto circle? I stared at my account, struggling all morning. If I cut losses, I worry about missing out on a rebound; if I don't, I'm afraid of continuing to fall deeper into a trap. This kind of dilemma is too tormenting. Eventually, I finally realized that what I should do now is hold on to cash tightly; definitely don’t play "philanthropist" at the floor price—missing out on the top is fine, but cutting losses at the lowest point could really mean a serious loss. Next, I’ll keep an eye on three signals: banks loosen lending, treasury bond yields drop, and the Federal Reserve changes its tone to soft talk. As for bottom fishing, just focus on BTC, ETH, BNB, these leaders. They are strong against declines and rebound quickly. When the signals arrive, entering in batches is definitely the right move. In fact, a crash is not scary; what’s scary is panicking and making random moves. The market has always washed out the weak hands during crashes and rewarded those who are patient during surges. Now that everyone is in a panic and cutting losses, if you can maintain your composure, when the storm passes, what you pick up won’t just be chips, but the opportunity to make money in the next round! @Square-Creator-2af13cb11218e
Did the crash hurt your liver? It turns out the three "blood extraction pumps" are causing trouble, retail investors, don't rush to cut losses!

The moment I opened the market software, I was directly stunned.

The Nasdaq and Bitcoin plunged simultaneously, my holdings were all in the red, making me feel suffocated.

I initially thought it was a black swan attack, but later realized, this was no accident; it was clearly three "capital harvesters" simultaneously at work, draining the market liquidity completely!

The first one is the Treasury's "money-grabbing operation." $163 billion in treasury bonds was released in a pile; this isn’t financing, it’s basically the national team coming down hard to grab!

As the risk-free interest rate rises, hot money all runs to buy treasury bonds. Who would still want to stay in these risk assets like cryptocurrencies and the stock market? My holdings were left behind to take a beating, falling without any spirit.

The second one is even harsher, the Federal Reserve's "expectation killing." I had been hoping for interest rate cuts every day, but then a simple "not in a hurry to cut rates" turned the script upside down, it was basically a public slap in the face.

Leveraged funds were scared into liquidating positions overnight, the liquidation orders crashed down like an avalanche, this isn’t a normal correction; it’s clearly funds trampling each other to escape. The coins in my hands plummeted all the way down, and there was no buying support even if I wanted to sell.

The third one is the banks' "cash shortage crisis." The overnight interest rate soared to outrageous levels, banks were looking everywhere for cash to save themselves, where could there be leftover grain flowing into the crypto circle?

I stared at my account, struggling all morning. If I cut losses, I worry about missing out on a rebound; if I don't, I'm afraid of continuing to fall deeper into a trap. This kind of dilemma is too tormenting.

Eventually, I finally realized that what I should do now is hold on to cash tightly; definitely don’t play "philanthropist" at the floor price—missing out on the top is fine, but cutting losses at the lowest point could really mean a serious loss.

Next, I’ll keep an eye on three signals: banks loosen lending, treasury bond yields drop, and the Federal Reserve changes its tone to soft talk.

As for bottom fishing, just focus on BTC, ETH, BNB, these leaders. They are strong against declines and rebound quickly. When the signals arrive, entering in batches is definitely the right move.

In fact, a crash is not scary; what’s scary is panicking and making random moves. The market has always washed out the weak hands during crashes and rewarded those who are patient during surges.

Now that everyone is in a panic and cutting losses, if you can maintain your composure, when the storm passes, what you pick up won’t just be chips, but the opportunity to make money in the next round! @加密珂姐
After more than 1 year in the market, still haven't found the way with 200,000 principal? Stop messing around! These 10 points are experiences I’ve gained from real money, execute thoroughly, and next time the market moves, you can reap the rewards. Don’t indulge in 'getting rich by going all in'! You don't need to operate daily with 200,000; grasping a trend once a year is enough. In the early days, I didn't practice my mindset; a single misjudgment wiped out 3 months of profits. Now, I make newcomers practice on a virtual account first, where the cost of trial and error is zero, and it can help eliminate impatience. Didn’t take profits on a significant positive news day? Run away directly at the high open the next day! This is a hard rule: when good news is delivered, bad news begins. In 2021, I held onto the illusion that 'it can still rise', dropping from a 30% profit to a 15% loss. Since then, I've firmly remembered: 'when good news is exhausted, it's time to leave quickly'. Clear out before the holiday week! Don't gamble on holiday market movements. I’ve suffered losses three times; holiday liquidity is poor, sudden fluctuations are hard to guard against, so it's better to stay out and enjoy the holiday, there will be plenty of opportunities afterward. Leave enough cash for medium to long-term! Sell in batches when it rises over 20%, replenish when it drops to the right level; trading in waves is better than holding onto it dead. I always keep 40% cash for the medium to long term, not afraid of missing out, and still have bullets to buy at the bottom. For short-term, only focus on 'hot targets'! Don't touch those with low trading volume and stagnant fluctuations, it’s purely a waste of time. I stayed with an obscure coin for half a month without any movement, then turned to chase a hot coin, and earned back the waiting cost in just 3 days. Remember the rule: slow drops must lead to slow rebounds, fast drops must lead to fast rebounds! Last year, a certain target dropped sharply by 30%, and after I bought at the bottom, it rebounded 25% in 3 days for profit; but for slowly dropping items, don’t wait for a return to cost, timely stop loss is wiser. If you buy wrong, don’t hold on! Stop loss is not admitting defeat; it’s preserving the principal to keep opportunities. In my early years, I was trapped and always hoped for a rebound, the deeper I got trapped, I later set rules: if it loses more than 5%, cut it directly; now I rarely lose big money because of holding on. For short-term, just look at the 15-minute K-line + KDJ! No need to pile indicators to the point of dizziness, I used to rely entirely on MACD and RSI but frequently missed opportunities, after simplifying, the accuracy doubled. Technical skills don't need to be numerous, mastering one or two tricks is enough! Newcomers always want to learn all methods, but end up overreaching. I now rely on 'wave stop profit + short-term KDJ', which is sufficient to cope with most market situations. Earning from crypto trading isn't about quick money; it's about respect for the market and control over oneself. These 10 points seem simple, but there are too few who can achieve 'not greedy, not panicking, and not acting blindly'. Many people focus on rushing to 1 million but forget that the market is always there. Preserving the principal and maintaining discipline are more important than catching 10 small trends. #特朗普缓和局势 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
After more than 1 year in the market, still haven't found the way with 200,000 principal?

Stop messing around! These 10 points are experiences I’ve gained from real money, execute thoroughly, and next time the market moves, you can reap the rewards.

Don’t indulge in 'getting rich by going all in'! You don't need to operate daily with 200,000; grasping a trend once a year is enough.

In the early days, I didn't practice my mindset; a single misjudgment wiped out 3 months of profits. Now, I make newcomers practice on a virtual account first, where the cost of trial and error is zero, and it can help eliminate impatience.

Didn’t take profits on a significant positive news day? Run away directly at the high open the next day! This is a hard rule: when good news is delivered, bad news begins.

In 2021, I held onto the illusion that 'it can still rise', dropping from a 30% profit to a 15% loss. Since then, I've firmly remembered: 'when good news is exhausted, it's time to leave quickly'.

Clear out before the holiday week! Don't gamble on holiday market movements. I’ve suffered losses three times; holiday liquidity is poor, sudden fluctuations are hard to guard against, so it's better to stay out and enjoy the holiday, there will be plenty of opportunities afterward.

Leave enough cash for medium to long-term! Sell in batches when it rises over 20%, replenish when it drops to the right level; trading in waves is better than holding onto it dead. I always keep 40% cash for the medium to long term, not afraid of missing out, and still have bullets to buy at the bottom.

For short-term, only focus on 'hot targets'! Don't touch those with low trading volume and stagnant fluctuations, it’s purely a waste of time.

I stayed with an obscure coin for half a month without any movement, then turned to chase a hot coin, and earned back the waiting cost in just 3 days.

Remember the rule: slow drops must lead to slow rebounds, fast drops must lead to fast rebounds! Last year, a certain target dropped sharply by 30%, and after I bought at the bottom, it rebounded 25% in 3 days for profit; but for slowly dropping items, don’t wait for a return to cost, timely stop loss is wiser.

If you buy wrong, don’t hold on! Stop loss is not admitting defeat; it’s preserving the principal to keep opportunities. In my early years, I was trapped and always hoped for a rebound, the deeper I got trapped, I later set rules: if it loses more than 5%, cut it directly; now I rarely lose big money because of holding on.

For short-term, just look at the 15-minute K-line + KDJ! No need to pile indicators to the point of dizziness, I used to rely entirely on MACD and RSI but frequently missed opportunities, after simplifying, the accuracy doubled.

Technical skills don't need to be numerous, mastering one or two tricks is enough! Newcomers always want to learn all methods, but end up overreaching. I now rely on 'wave stop profit + short-term KDJ', which is sufficient to cope with most market situations.

Earning from crypto trading isn't about quick money; it's about respect for the market and control over oneself. These 10 points seem simple, but there are too few who can achieve 'not greedy, not panicking, and not acting blindly'.

Many people focus on rushing to 1 million but forget that the market is always there. Preserving the principal and maintaining discipline are more important than catching 10 small trends. #特朗普缓和局势 $ETH
When I first encountered contracts, I treated "fixed 3% stop-loss" as a golden rule. ​ ​ The forum was full of praise like "this trick is as solid as a rock" and "systematic approach avoids pitfalls," and there were people in the group sharing screenshots of using it to "hedge risks." I followed along without much thought. ​ ​ As a result, in less than half a year, my account losses kept me awake at night — especially during that extreme Ethereum market, thinking back still makes my heart race: the morning surged 5 points, in the afternoon suddenly plummeted 8 points, and late at night shot back up. ​ ​ My 3% stop-loss became a laughingstock in the market: just stopped out in the morning, and the afternoon market surged; ​ ​ triggered stop-loss three times in a day, and the fees piled up as "cutting losses money," with the principal directly reduced by one-fifth. ​ ​ It was only then that I realized: is stop-loss really a clumsy method of just staring at numbers? ​ ​ Clearly, it is a technical activity that must follow the rhythm of the market. Using fixed values for all market conditions is like running a marathon in flip-flops; no matter how hard you try, you will still sprain your ankle. ​ ​ Later, I calmed down to study the volatility indicator ATR, and finally grasped the principle: the market's "breathing rhythm" should be the standard for stop-loss levels. ​ ​ I started using the "dynamic stop-loss method": since Ethereum is highly volatile, I set the stop-loss at ATR×1.8; for SOL with stable trends, I adjusted it to ATR×1.2. Stop-losses changed in real-time with the market, no longer clinging to fixed points. ​ ​ Since then, my orders have not been swept away by "false spikes" — I could withstand the market's washing while being able to exit in time when the market truly broke. While others were repeatedly cutting losses, I could capture the complete trend. ​ ​ In fact, when trading contracts, stop-loss is not a rigid protective wall but a flexible profit valve: if set too close, it will be swept away by normal fluctuations; if set too far, it will be engulfed by reversals. ​ ​ Those who survive in the market and still make profits are always those who dare to first understand the rules before reaching out. Are you ready to change your mindset? #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 @Square-Creator-2af13cb11218e $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
When I first encountered contracts, I treated "fixed 3% stop-loss" as a golden rule. ​

The forum was full of praise like "this trick is as solid as a rock" and "systematic approach avoids pitfalls," and there were people in the group sharing screenshots of using it to "hedge risks." I followed along without much thought. ​

As a result, in less than half a year, my account losses kept me awake at night — especially during that extreme Ethereum market, thinking back still makes my heart race: the morning surged 5 points, in the afternoon suddenly plummeted 8 points, and late at night shot back up. ​

My 3% stop-loss became a laughingstock in the market: just stopped out in the morning, and the afternoon market surged; ​

triggered stop-loss three times in a day, and the fees piled up as "cutting losses money," with the principal directly reduced by one-fifth. ​

It was only then that I realized: is stop-loss really a clumsy method of just staring at numbers? ​

Clearly, it is a technical activity that must follow the rhythm of the market. Using fixed values for all market conditions is like running a marathon in flip-flops; no matter how hard you try, you will still sprain your ankle. ​

Later, I calmed down to study the volatility indicator ATR, and finally grasped the principle: the market's "breathing rhythm" should be the standard for stop-loss levels. ​

I started using the "dynamic stop-loss method": since Ethereum is highly volatile, I set the stop-loss at ATR×1.8; for SOL with stable trends, I adjusted it to ATR×1.2. Stop-losses changed in real-time with the market, no longer clinging to fixed points. ​

Since then, my orders have not been swept away by "false spikes" — I could withstand the market's washing while being able to exit in time when the market truly broke. While others were repeatedly cutting losses, I could capture the complete trend. ​

In fact, when trading contracts, stop-loss is not a rigid protective wall but a flexible profit valve: if set too close, it will be swept away by normal fluctuations; if set too far, it will be engulfed by reversals. ​

Those who survive in the market and still make profits are always those who dare to first understand the rules before reaching out. Are you ready to change your mindset? #特朗普缓和局势 #国际油价下跌 @加密珂姐 $ETH
At the beginning of the year, I took on a student who was a complete novice. When he first entered the trading world, he couldn't even understand candlestick charts and was dizzy looking at the red and green bars on the trading interface. He asked me, "Is this line jumping around trying to scam me?" He had a capital of 1000U, holding it tightly, afraid that any operation would make it go to zero. But who would have thought, three months later, he turned that 1000U into 10,000U. Many people came to ask me if I had given him some insider indicators. I really didn’t; he relied entirely on a "ridiculously simple" five-step method that allowed him to stand firmly in the crypto space, especially when trading $ZEC and $BEAT, this method worked particularly well. The first step is strict position sizing. He divided the 1000U into 10 parts, only daring to invest 100U each time. Some laughed at him for being too timid, saying that placing a 100U order was like playing house. He didn't care and firmly believed in "not putting all eggs in one basket." The second step is even more "rigid," only recognizing one type of signal. He never looked at random indicators; he focused on two charts: the 1-hour chart where the 7-line crosses the 21-line, and then looking at the 4-hour MACD crossing above the zero line. Only when both conditions were met would he take action. Once, $ZEC was just about to meet the conditions, and he stayed up until dawn waiting for the signal. I said, "That’s close enough," but he shook his head and said, "Rules cannot be broken." The third step is discipline to an extreme. As soon as he opened a position, he would set his take profit and stop loss. If he lost 1%, he would immediately run. If he made 3%, he would walk away. The first time he set a stop-loss order, his finger hovered over the screen for a long time, afraid that as soon as he sold, the price would rise. However, the moment the trade was executed, it dropped by 2%. Since then, he never hesitated again. The fourth step relies on compound interest to snowball. If he wins, he reinvests the profits along with half of the principal. If he wins a second time, he only operates with 2% of the total capital. It seems slow, but after a month, the returns were significantly higher than those who chased highs and cut losses. The final step is to avoid the retail trader graveyard. He had previously lost money due to reckless trading on non-farm payroll nights, so he created a blacklist: avoiding trading before and after non-farm payrolls, not trading from 8 PM to 10 PM on Fridays, and only choosing to trade $BEAT between 1 AM and 3 AM. "During this time, there aren’t many big players causing trouble, it’s stable," this was the most valuable lesson he learned. This method is not "high-end," but he relied on this strictness to change from someone who couldn't even understand candlesticks to someone who can now make consistent profits. In the crypto world, it’s not about technology that leads to losses; it’s about impulsiveness and a restless heart. Don’t envy others for getting rich quickly; the difference between 1000U and 10,000U is just the "ridiculously stubborn" persistence. If you are still wandering aimlessly, feel free to come chat with me at @Square-Creator-2af13cb11218e $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
At the beginning of the year, I took on a student who was a complete novice. When he first entered the trading world, he couldn't even understand candlestick charts and was dizzy looking at the red and green bars on the trading interface. He asked me, "Is this line jumping around trying to scam me?"

He had a capital of 1000U, holding it tightly, afraid that any operation would make it go to zero.

But who would have thought, three months later, he turned that 1000U into 10,000U.

Many people came to ask me if I had given him some insider indicators. I really didn’t; he relied entirely on a "ridiculously simple" five-step method that allowed him to stand firmly in the crypto space, especially when trading $ZEC and $BEAT, this method worked particularly well.

The first step is strict position sizing.

He divided the 1000U into 10 parts, only daring to invest 100U each time. Some laughed at him for being too timid, saying that placing a 100U order was like playing house. He didn't care and firmly believed in "not putting all eggs in one basket."

The second step is even more "rigid," only recognizing one type of signal.

He never looked at random indicators; he focused on two charts: the 1-hour chart where the 7-line crosses the 21-line, and then looking at the 4-hour MACD crossing above the zero line. Only when both conditions were met would he take action. Once, $ZEC was just about to meet the conditions, and he stayed up until dawn waiting for the signal. I said, "That’s close enough," but he shook his head and said, "Rules cannot be broken."

The third step is discipline to an extreme.

As soon as he opened a position, he would set his take profit and stop loss. If he lost 1%, he would immediately run. If he made 3%, he would walk away. The first time he set a stop-loss order, his finger hovered over the screen for a long time, afraid that as soon as he sold, the price would rise. However, the moment the trade was executed, it dropped by 2%. Since then, he never hesitated again.

The fourth step relies on compound interest to snowball. If he wins, he reinvests the profits along with half of the principal. If he wins a second time, he only operates with 2% of the total capital. It seems slow, but after a month, the returns were significantly higher than those who chased highs and cut losses.

The final step is to avoid the retail trader graveyard. He had previously lost money due to reckless trading on non-farm payroll nights, so he created a blacklist: avoiding trading before and after non-farm payrolls, not trading from 8 PM to 10 PM on Fridays, and only choosing to trade $BEAT between 1 AM and 3 AM. "During this time, there aren’t many big players causing trouble, it’s stable," this was the most valuable lesson he learned.

This method is not "high-end," but he relied on this strictness to change from someone who couldn't even understand candlesticks to someone who can now make consistent profits.

In the crypto world, it’s not about technology that leads to losses; it’s about impulsiveness and a restless heart. Don’t envy others for getting rich quickly; the difference between 1000U and 10,000U is just the "ridiculously stubborn" persistence. If you are still wandering aimlessly, feel free to come chat with me at @加密珂姐 $ETH
Don't blame high leverage for causing harm; the one harming you is yourself. Yesterday I spoke to Xiao Li on the phone, his voice was hoarse—500,000 principal, using 3x leverage on ETH, and in three days it dropped to 20,000. Before hanging up, he cursed: "High leverage is a trap, never touch it!" I didn't argue, but I knew in my heart that the one harming him wasn't the leverage, but his own "gambler's mentality." I used to be afraid of leverage, always thinking that "the higher the multiple, the more dangerous it is," holding onto the spot market and watching others use 10x leverage to capitalize on doubling trends, I could only slap my thigh in frustration. It wasn't until last year when I followed Lao Zhou in trading BTC that my understanding was completely overturned: when the market starts, if the spot rises by 5%, he makes a direct profit of 50% with 10x leverage, while I only get a taste of the soup. I asked Lao Zhou, "Aren't you afraid of liquidation?" He pulled out his trading records for me to see: every time he opens a position, he draws trend lines in advance, only entering when the daily EMA30 is stable, and he sets a stop-loss as soon as he opens a position, cutting losses at 5% and locking in half the profit at 20%. "Leverage is a magnifying glass," he pointed at the screen and said, "If you have a method, it magnifies profits; if you mess around, it magnifies losses." Xiao Li's problem is the same as mine back then: opening positions without looking at trends, daring to go all-in with 3x leverage, hoping for a "rebound" after losses, never setting stop-losses, getting emotional with every market fluctuation, it's no different from gambling. In contrast, Lao Zhou, using 10x leverage, is actually steadier than trading the spot market because he has ingrained in himself the principles of "accurate judgment, steady execution, and ruthless stop-losses." Accurate judgment means not touching unclear markets and only trading confirmed trends on the daily chart; steady execution means waiting for a pullback to support before entering, never chasing the price up; Ruthless stop-losses mean that as soon as he opens a position, he nails down the stop-loss line, and even if he gets "spiked," he doesn't regret it. If these three points are achieved, high leverage becomes a wealth accelerator; if not, even 1x leverage can wipe you out. Now I also use 8x leverage, but my account is becoming increasingly stable. In this market, there are always people cursing leverage for causing harm, yet they refuse to admit their own problems. —Impatience, lack of method, inability to maintain mindset. In fact, leverage has never been the enemy, it's a tool, just like a kitchen knife, it can cut vegetables but can also harm people; it all depends on whether the person holding the knife understands the method. The market is about to move, don't just hide when you hear about high leverage, and don't blindly go all-in. First, sharpen your trading logic, maintain a good mindset, so that when the next market comes, you can let leverage make money for you, rather than being harvested by it. #特朗普缓和局势 $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
Don't blame high leverage for causing harm; the one harming you is yourself.

Yesterday I spoke to Xiao Li on the phone, his voice was hoarse—500,000 principal, using 3x leverage on ETH, and in three days it dropped to 20,000.

Before hanging up, he cursed: "High leverage is a trap, never touch it!" I didn't argue, but I knew in my heart that the one harming him wasn't the leverage, but his own "gambler's mentality."

I used to be afraid of leverage, always thinking that "the higher the multiple, the more dangerous it is," holding onto the spot market and watching others use 10x leverage to capitalize on doubling trends, I could only slap my thigh in frustration.

It wasn't until last year when I followed Lao Zhou in trading BTC that my understanding was completely overturned: when the market starts, if the spot rises by 5%, he makes a direct profit of 50% with 10x leverage, while I only get a taste of the soup.

I asked Lao Zhou, "Aren't you afraid of liquidation?" He pulled out his trading records for me to see: every time he opens a position, he draws trend lines in advance, only entering when the daily EMA30 is stable, and he sets a stop-loss as soon as he opens a position, cutting losses at 5% and locking in half the profit at 20%.

"Leverage is a magnifying glass," he pointed at the screen and said, "If you have a method, it magnifies profits; if you mess around, it magnifies losses."

Xiao Li's problem is the same as mine back then: opening positions without looking at trends, daring to go all-in with 3x leverage, hoping for a "rebound" after losses, never setting stop-losses, getting emotional with every market fluctuation, it's no different from gambling.

In contrast, Lao Zhou, using 10x leverage, is actually steadier than trading the spot market because he has ingrained in himself the principles of "accurate judgment, steady execution, and ruthless stop-losses."

Accurate judgment means not touching unclear markets and only trading confirmed trends on the daily chart; steady execution means waiting for a pullback to support before entering, never chasing the price up;

Ruthless stop-losses mean that as soon as he opens a position, he nails down the stop-loss line, and even if he gets "spiked," he doesn't regret it.

If these three points are achieved, high leverage becomes a wealth accelerator; if not, even 1x leverage can wipe you out.

Now I also use 8x leverage, but my account is becoming increasingly stable. In this market, there are always people cursing leverage for causing harm, yet they refuse to admit their own problems.

—Impatience, lack of method, inability to maintain mindset. In fact, leverage has never been the enemy, it's a tool, just like a kitchen knife, it can cut vegetables but can also harm people; it all depends on whether the person holding the knife understands the method.

The market is about to move, don't just hide when you hear about high leverage, and don't blindly go all-in.

First, sharpen your trading logic, maintain a good mindset, so that when the next market comes, you can let leverage make money for you, rather than being harvested by it. #特朗普缓和局势 $ETH
Perpetual contracts are not a gambling table; they are about calculating the accounts before getting to the table. Last week I just blacklisted a so-called "teacher" who told fans to go all-in with 20x BTC, and as a result, that night the funding rate turned positive, and the bulls were harvested to tears. Honestly, too many people treat perpetual contracts as a casino, forgetting that the core of this thing is "calculation," not "gambling." I also fell for it in my early years; when I was liquidated at 50x leverage, I had only two digits left in my account. Now that I can stabilize, it's all thanks to the clumsy methods I summarized after stepping into all the pitfalls. First, thoroughly understand the life-saving mechanisms; don’t wait until you’re liquidated to ask "why." The funding rate is like the market's thermometer: when the rate is positive, bulls pay bears, indicating everyone is chasing, and charging long at this point is just catching the falling knife; when the rate is negative, bears pay, so don’t be foolish trying to bottom out for fear of being smashed. As for leverage, beginners shouldn’t touch more than 5x. Even now that I’m familiar with it, I don’t dare exceed 10x. If you dare to go 50x, one market pullback will leave you clean. Also, pay attention to the marked price; it’s more reliable than the transaction price, helping to prevent malicious spike hunting for stop-losses. Remember this. My four-step approach, tested and proven to help avoid detours. Step one, look at the trend: when the daily EMA30 outperforms EMA60 and the MACD histogram turns red, only then is the bull considered stable. Don’t believe in "small cycle reversals"; if the direction is wrong, you will lose no matter what. Step two, find the opportunity: when the 4-hour K-line retraces to the middle Bollinger Band and the RSI bounces back from below 40, that’s the low buying opportunity; when the 1-hour breaks the descending line with increased volume, it’s not too late to act—currently, I won’t even touch counter-trend trades. Use tools wisely; just enough is fine. Using TradingView to draw EMA and MACD is sufficient, checking CoinGlass’s funding rate heat map daily is a must, CryptoQuant’s liquidation data can help avoid pitfalls, and backtesting strategies on Pionex before live trading is better than guessing. The most crucial thing is to control risk: set stop-losses before opening trades. I set mine to cut losses at 15% and lock in half profits at 20%. In my early years, without stop-losses, I gave back all the profits I made, but now I can sleep soundly. Finally, I advise beginners to first open a demo account at Bybit or Binance; only trade live when you have a win rate of over 65% for three consecutive weeks. Capital management is your shield, and discipline is the throne—don’t envy others doubling their money in a day. Those who haven’t calculated risks well may earn today but could give it all back tomorrow. In this market, it’s not about being fast; it's about not rushing to death. Calculating every risk clearly allows you to survive longer than the market. #特朗普缓和局势 @Square-Creator-2af13cb11218e $ETH {future}(ETHUSDT)
Perpetual contracts are not a gambling table; they are about calculating the accounts before getting to the table.

Last week I just blacklisted a so-called "teacher" who told fans to go all-in with 20x BTC, and as a result, that night the funding rate turned positive, and the bulls were harvested to tears.

Honestly, too many people treat perpetual contracts as a casino, forgetting that the core of this thing is "calculation," not "gambling."

I also fell for it in my early years; when I was liquidated at 50x leverage, I had only two digits left in my account. Now that I can stabilize, it's all thanks to the clumsy methods I summarized after stepping into all the pitfalls.

First, thoroughly understand the life-saving mechanisms; don’t wait until you’re liquidated to ask "why." The funding rate is like the market's thermometer: when the rate is positive, bulls pay bears, indicating everyone is chasing, and charging long at this point is just catching the falling knife; when the rate is negative, bears pay, so don’t be foolish trying to bottom out for fear of being smashed.

As for leverage, beginners shouldn’t touch more than 5x. Even now that I’m familiar with it, I don’t dare exceed 10x. If you dare to go 50x, one market pullback will leave you clean.

Also, pay attention to the marked price; it’s more reliable than the transaction price, helping to prevent malicious spike hunting for stop-losses. Remember this.

My four-step approach, tested and proven to help avoid detours. Step one, look at the trend: when the daily EMA30 outperforms EMA60 and the MACD histogram turns red, only then is the bull considered stable. Don’t believe in "small cycle reversals"; if the direction is wrong, you will lose no matter what.

Step two, find the opportunity: when the 4-hour K-line retraces to the middle Bollinger Band and the RSI bounces back from below 40, that’s the low buying opportunity; when the 1-hour breaks the descending line with increased volume, it’s not too late to act—currently, I won’t even touch counter-trend trades.

Use tools wisely; just enough is fine. Using TradingView to draw EMA and MACD is sufficient, checking CoinGlass’s funding rate heat map daily is a must, CryptoQuant’s liquidation data can help avoid pitfalls, and backtesting strategies on Pionex before live trading is better than guessing.

The most crucial thing is to control risk: set stop-losses before opening trades. I set mine to cut losses at 15% and lock in half profits at 20%. In my early years, without stop-losses, I gave back all the profits I made, but now I can sleep soundly.

Finally, I advise beginners to first open a demo account at Bybit or Binance; only trade live when you have a win rate of over 65% for three consecutive weeks.

Capital management is your shield, and discipline is the throne—don’t envy others doubling their money in a day. Those who haven’t calculated risks well may earn today but could give it all back tomorrow.

In this market, it’s not about being fast; it's about not rushing to death. Calculating every risk clearly allows you to survive longer than the market. #特朗普缓和局势 @加密珂姐 $ETH
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