Why does liquidation happen constantly, yet more people are playing contracts? Because it gives a false impression: making money too quickly. Theoretically, both long and short have a 50% win rate, but in reality, only one in ten can sustain profits. Imagine this: take 10,000, leverage it 100 times. If you're right, it becomes one million; if you're wrong, you go back to delivering food, saving money to come back. It sounds fair, but human nature cannot withstand the test. When you actually make one million, you will think: why not two million? When you reach two million, you will look towards three million. Until one day, an extreme market condition flashes by, and everything goes to zero. When you lose ten thousand, you feel unwilling. You borrow online loans, swipe credit cards, and keep increasing your bets, wanting to turn the tables. As a result, the hole gets bigger and bigger, until it can no longer be filled. This is the script for most people: no one walks away unscathed from contracts. Either you lose everything and leave, or you lose everything earlier and leave. Contracts provide not only money but also a heartbeat. Once, the account had eight digits, and even if it was just numbers, it was enough to become addictive. Rationally, we all understand, but once caught up, it's all emotions in operation. It’s only when the balance hits zero that one wakes up. Do you understand now? Relying on contracts for long-term profits is as difficult as climbing to the sky. Unless you have your own trading system and execute it like a machine. Otherwise, after the carnival, it ultimately ends up being empty. Nice to meet you all, the AI quantitative trading robot 🤖 focuses on $ETH and $BTC contracts ambushing, the team still has positions available, hop on quickly, and let you become the dealer and also a winner. #黄金创43年来最大单周跌幅
I want to ask the brothers who trade every day with the order $BTC , is the overall profit making or losing? I need a real answer. #CZ称比特币是硬资产 @空了賺點零花錢