#密码资产动态追踪 The truth about liquidation—it's not about being unsmart, just overly greedy
I've seen too many accounts where the market direction is completely correct, but in the end, they get stopped out halfway. Why does this happen? As soon as it rises, they want to go all in; as soon as it falls, they hold on stubbornly, treating rolling positions as a synonym for mindless adding.
Honestly, I’ve survived until now not by any advanced technique, but by a counterintuitive principle: only use the profits to increase positions, never touch the principal.
Initially, I started with 1000U to test the waters. If the market moves favorably, I let the profits grow slowly; if it doesn’t cooperate, I cut losses immediately and wait for the next opportunity. The downside of this approach is a lack of passion, no adrenaline rush. But the account becomes more and more stable each year—that’s the real truth.
How extreme are many people's trading methods now? They have a 10,000U account but open positions worth 98,000U, just thinking about doubling and then running. How crazy is the market? It loves to give you fake breakouts when you’re most confident, directly slashing your positions without even giving a chance to escape.
People who truly understand trading think similarly: when there are no clear signals, stay out and wait; once the rhythm is confirmed, act decisively. Profits are never just luck; they come from a sense of rhythm combined with a rolling position mechanism.
Don’t be fooled by complicated indicators. One logical understanding is enough—your principal is your life, and profits are your bullets. Use bullets to exchange for wealth in big markets, not to gamble your life on luck. That’s the difference.
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MetaMuskRat
· 7h ago
Not moving the principal is truly amazing. I've seen too many all-ins end up with nothing.
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TaxEvader
· 7h ago
Talking about strategies on paper is easy; when it comes to life and death moments, you'll still go all in.
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FarmHopper
· 7h ago
I’ve already figured out this trick of not touching the principal, but no one listens. You have to pay the tuition with your own blood and tears.
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TopEscapeArtist
· 7h ago
It's a tough talk, but I'm currently stuck in this pit haha. The 98,000 leverage part really hit my lungs, and I couldn't hold back before the MACD even had a golden cross.
#密码资产动态追踪 The truth about liquidation—it's not about being unsmart, just overly greedy
I've seen too many accounts where the market direction is completely correct, but in the end, they get stopped out halfway. Why does this happen? As soon as it rises, they want to go all in; as soon as it falls, they hold on stubbornly, treating rolling positions as a synonym for mindless adding.
Honestly, I’ve survived until now not by any advanced technique, but by a counterintuitive principle: only use the profits to increase positions, never touch the principal.
Initially, I started with 1000U to test the waters. If the market moves favorably, I let the profits grow slowly; if it doesn’t cooperate, I cut losses immediately and wait for the next opportunity. The downside of this approach is a lack of passion, no adrenaline rush. But the account becomes more and more stable each year—that’s the real truth.
How extreme are many people's trading methods now? They have a 10,000U account but open positions worth 98,000U, just thinking about doubling and then running. How crazy is the market? It loves to give you fake breakouts when you’re most confident, directly slashing your positions without even giving a chance to escape.
People who truly understand trading think similarly: when there are no clear signals, stay out and wait; once the rhythm is confirmed, act decisively. Profits are never just luck; they come from a sense of rhythm combined with a rolling position mechanism.
Don’t be fooled by complicated indicators. One logical understanding is enough—your principal is your life, and profits are your bullets. Use bullets to exchange for wealth in big markets, not to gamble your life on luck. That’s the difference.