A fan reached out to me early in the morning to complain: With the same market conditions, why did you earn 42% while I lost 28%?
Actually, we are looking at the same candlestick chart, but the difference lies in completely different trading logic. He sticks to the principal, while I use a profit rolling method.
This approach didn't come out of nowhere. After three margin calls over 8 years and losing 200,000 yuan, I gradually developed a relatively stable profit framework. The core idea is simple: preserve the principal and use profits to fight.
How exactly does it work? The first step is to respect the principal. Use 5% as the trial order size, with a strict stop loss set at 0.8%. If there are no clear signals, stay out of the market. This ensures your principal beats over 80% of traders.
Once profits reach 50%, split into two parts—half to lock in profits and secure gains, and the other half as operating capital for further entries. Only use profits to add positions, while the principal remains untouched.
After floating profits exceed the principal, switch your mindset. Take out 10% of the profits for hedging insurance, and extend the stop loss to 50%. This way, even if there's a pullback, you can withstand it, and profits will continue to appreciate.
The real turning point is within 3 minutes—breakout combined with volume expansion goes all in; if it breaks support with decreasing volume, close all positions immediately—no room for hesitation.
When the drawdown reaches 15%, lock in half of the profits immediately, and let the remaining part continue to run. Before each trading day's close, withdraw all profits earned that day, leaving only the principal plus 10% of liquid funds in the account. This helps avoid impulsive heavy positions.
Market opportunities are always present, but most people lack discipline. Use profits to take risks, let the principal sleep, and finally, watch the market close with a smile.
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GasSavingMaster
· 01-06 05:33
Damn, discipline really is the biggest gain. I used to be the type to hold onto my principal tightly, but ended up going all-in and losing everything in one shot.
The logic of profit rolling sounds simple, but actually doing it is really difficult—it's just lacking that kind of resolve.
That's where the difference between people lies. We look at the same chart, but the results are worlds apart. How should I put it...
Wait, is that 3-minute win-or-lose strategy a bit too aggressive? I need to think about it more.
I'm now following this approach, and it's already much more stable than before. I don't feel as mentally exhausted.
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LayerZeroJunkie
· 01-05 10:31
说得没毛病,纪律才是真的刀子。我也是被爆仓教过好几次才懂这套的。
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ShitcoinConnoisseur
· 01-05 02:16
That's right, it's discipline. Most people simply can't do it.
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OnchainSniper
· 01-03 09:54
This core is just about stop-loss discipline, nothing else.
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That's right, but most people simply can't do it...
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The profit rolling strategy is really powerful, but the psychological barrier is too hard to overcome.
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Trying 0.8% stop-loss with 5% trial orders—I've memorized this ratio.
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Haha, as I always say, knowing and doing are worlds apart.
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The key is whether you can really stick to the discipline; this difficulty is much greater than making money itself.
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So you only realized this after 3 margin calls—that's a costly tuition fee.
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When breaking through and increasing volume, going all-in—what indicators do you need to coordinate with?
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Taking profits before the daily close—how much self-control does that require...
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I like the setting of never moving the principal; it feels much more comfortable psychologically.
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ChainSpy
· 01-03 09:54
This profit rolling method sounds good, but in reality, only a few can execute it properly.
Basically, it's about discipline. Most failures are due to impulsiveness.
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ContractTearjerker
· 01-03 09:51
What I learned after going bankrupt 3 times in 8 years and losing 200,000 yuan—it's easy to say, but every detail is filled with blood and tears.
View OriginalReply0
PaperHandSister
· 01-03 09:49
Discipline is easy to talk about, but actually implementing it can be so exhausting.
View OriginalReply0
RamenDeFiSurvivor
· 01-03 09:37
Wow, this discipline is really top-notch. I need to think it over carefully.
A fan reached out to me early in the morning to complain: With the same market conditions, why did you earn 42% while I lost 28%?
Actually, we are looking at the same candlestick chart, but the difference lies in completely different trading logic. He sticks to the principal, while I use a profit rolling method.
This approach didn't come out of nowhere. After three margin calls over 8 years and losing 200,000 yuan, I gradually developed a relatively stable profit framework. The core idea is simple: preserve the principal and use profits to fight.
How exactly does it work? The first step is to respect the principal. Use 5% as the trial order size, with a strict stop loss set at 0.8%. If there are no clear signals, stay out of the market. This ensures your principal beats over 80% of traders.
Once profits reach 50%, split into two parts—half to lock in profits and secure gains, and the other half as operating capital for further entries. Only use profits to add positions, while the principal remains untouched.
After floating profits exceed the principal, switch your mindset. Take out 10% of the profits for hedging insurance, and extend the stop loss to 50%. This way, even if there's a pullback, you can withstand it, and profits will continue to appreciate.
The real turning point is within 3 minutes—breakout combined with volume expansion goes all in; if it breaks support with decreasing volume, close all positions immediately—no room for hesitation.
When the drawdown reaches 15%, lock in half of the profits immediately, and let the remaining part continue to run. Before each trading day's close, withdraw all profits earned that day, leaving only the principal plus 10% of liquid funds in the account. This helps avoid impulsive heavy positions.
Market opportunities are always present, but most people lack discipline. Use profits to take risks, let the principal sleep, and finally, watch the market close with a smile.