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I've been trading for over ten years, gradually growing my account from a few thousand yuan. Throughout this process, there are some experiences worth sharing.
Many people always want to ask if there are any secrets or insider tips, but there really aren't. The whole process relies on a set of methods that many find boring: small positions, slow pace, high tolerance for errors.
It sounds simple, but it's very practical to implement. Later, I broke down this approach and explained it to a few people around me. They followed it, and after three months, their account curves became much smoother than before.
**Funds Must Be Diversified**
Divide your total capital into several parts, and only use one part for each entry. If your judgment is wrong, losses are kept very small. Continuous mistakes won't damage the principal. Conversely, if your judgment is correct, profits can be accumulated one after another.
**Follow the Market’s Temperament**
Most dips and rebounds are opportunities to get out of trouble; don’t try to bottom fish. Rallies that retrace are more likely to offer good entry points. The direction of the market is always more important than your judgment.
**Skip Targets with Explosive Growth**
Assets that surge rapidly tend to fall just as fast. When they reach high levels, they tend to move sideways, essentially digesting the chips. Participating in such markets relies more on luck.
**Only Watch Key Indicators**
MACD is not used for precise bottom-fishing or top-topping; it’s to see if there’s momentum. Only participate when it turns stronger below the zero line and aligns with structural signals; when it weakens at high levels, it’s time to close positions.
**Don’t Add to Losses**
Drawdowns are the easiest to become emotional about, and adding positions at this time often just compounds mistakes. Increasing positions must be based on already being profitable.
**Volume Doesn’t Lie**
Low-volume breakout indicates capital entering; high-volume stagnation often signals a shakeout. Price can deceive, but volume won’t.
**Only Trade Upward Structures**
Short-term upward trends are suitable for short-term trading; medium-term upward trends are suitable for swing trading; long-term upward trends are the main market trend. Trading against the structure doubles the difficulty.
**Review Your Trades Carefully**
Every trade should be clear on why you entered and why you exited, and whether your judgment basis was broken. Over time, this will naturally lead to stability.
How far an account can go ultimately depends on whether you can consistently do these things right in the long run, not on how much you make in a single trade.