I have a friend who started with 500U to test the waters, and two weeks later, the account showed 5720U. It's not some mystical method; it's just about honestly following the rhythm, keeping it to no more than two trades a day, and slowly accumulating profits.
To be honest, in this market, those who can truly stand firm don't rely on gambling but on systematic operations. Here are a few strategies that have been repeatedly validated in actual trading:
**On Entry Timing** Don’t chase highs—focus on assets that have experienced excessive emotional swings. Start with 5% of your position to test the waters, and only increase to around 30% after confirming a trend reversal signal. The core of this approach is waiting—waiting for the market to give a clear signal, not just jumping in based on a feeling.
**How to Allocate Funds** Divide your capital into three parts: one part follows the main trend for big gains, one part is used for short-term arbitrage to top up profits, and another part is reserved for adding positions during pullbacks. Sounds complicated? In fact, this rolling method is much more stable than going all-in, and profits are bitten off bit by bit.
**On Execution Discipline** No matter how good your technique, without discipline, it's useless. Predetermine your stop-loss points, take profits in batches, and plan your exit before entering. After that, let the market do its thing—don’t always try to predict the absolute top or bottom.
I've seen too many people make a dozen trades a day, only to get stuck in every single one. In contrast, those who only make two trades a day and stick to their plan end up with a much healthier account curve.
The crypto market moves fast—a single day’s volatility can rival several months in traditional markets. Some people recover past losses in three months, while others just spin their wheels. The difference isn’t in how much capital you have, but whether you have a repeatable trading framework.
The market window is still open now; once it closes, you’ll have to wait out another cycle. Figure out what you really want, then take action. Don’t just drool over other people’s profit screenshots.
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PessimisticOracle
· 12-06 18:51
Too hard to earn quickly
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ProofOfNothing
· 12-06 18:50
High-risk, life-on-the-line retail investors
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SybilAttackVictim
· 12-06 18:46
Impatient and uncomfortable with profits and losses
I have a friend who started with 500U to test the waters, and two weeks later, the account showed 5720U. It's not some mystical method; it's just about honestly following the rhythm, keeping it to no more than two trades a day, and slowly accumulating profits.
To be honest, in this market, those who can truly stand firm don't rely on gambling but on systematic operations. Here are a few strategies that have been repeatedly validated in actual trading:
**On Entry Timing**
Don’t chase highs—focus on assets that have experienced excessive emotional swings. Start with 5% of your position to test the waters, and only increase to around 30% after confirming a trend reversal signal. The core of this approach is waiting—waiting for the market to give a clear signal, not just jumping in based on a feeling.
**How to Allocate Funds**
Divide your capital into three parts: one part follows the main trend for big gains, one part is used for short-term arbitrage to top up profits, and another part is reserved for adding positions during pullbacks. Sounds complicated? In fact, this rolling method is much more stable than going all-in, and profits are bitten off bit by bit.
**On Execution Discipline**
No matter how good your technique, without discipline, it's useless. Predetermine your stop-loss points, take profits in batches, and plan your exit before entering. After that, let the market do its thing—don’t always try to predict the absolute top or bottom.
I've seen too many people make a dozen trades a day, only to get stuck in every single one. In contrast, those who only make two trades a day and stick to their plan end up with a much healthier account curve.
The crypto market moves fast—a single day’s volatility can rival several months in traditional markets. Some people recover past losses in three months, while others just spin their wheels. The difference isn’t in how much capital you have, but whether you have a repeatable trading framework.
The market window is still open now; once it closes, you’ll have to wait out another cycle. Figure out what you really want, then take action. Don’t just drool over other people’s profit screenshots.