#数字资产行情上升 I've seen too many people in the crypto world go from a million-dollar net worth to being broke. The most exciting and brutal strategy in this market is position rolling trading — winning big or getting liquidated instantly.



Some rely on just $1,000 for food, and within three months, turn it into $100,000. It sounds like a fairy tale, but there are only a few methods: high leverage, reinvesting profits, and sticking to a single direction.

I've done it too. Starting with $300, I would open 100x leverage with $10 each time. As long as I earned 1%, I could double my money; I’d withdraw half of the profit immediately and let the rest roll over. Mathematically, it’s very tempting — 11 consecutive times, $10 could theoretically turn into $10,000.

But why do 90% of people fail on this path?

They can’t stop when they’re making money, keep pressing for more profits, and end up getting hit by a reversal wave back to zero.

When losing money, they can’t afford to stop and try to add more to recover, sinking deeper and deeper.

Market swings are unpredictable, and frequent direction changes leave traders battered and unrecognizable.

I set two ironclad rules for myself that have saved me multiple times:

First, cut your losses immediately. If you lose 20 times in a row, force yourself to stop — no trying to turn it around.

Second, once you reach a profit target (like $5,000), you must withdraw some of it. Never let all profits stay in the account, or you’re gambling on losing everything.

I’ve experienced the moment when $500 turned into $500,000 in three days. But nobody knows I had been sitting on the sidelines for four months before that. The essence of position rolling isn’t about daily trading; it’s about using profits to gamble for maximum returns in a clear, one-sided trend.

So, if you ask me whether you can roll positions, you need to ask yourself three questions:

Is the current market volatility enough? Is there enough room to make money?

Is the trend clearly one-sided? Or is it just oscillating back and forth?

Can you truly control greed — only take the fish meat, and give up the tail and head?

If all three answers are yes, you can try cautiously. But honestly, it’s a severe stress test conducted with strict discipline. Essentially, it’s not investing — it’s a test of your psychology and execution ability.
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DiamondHandsvip
· 01-08 08:10
It's quite eye-opening; I am among that 90% who have stumbled and fallen. Greed is truly poison. You make a little profit and want to push further, but end up trapped and still haven't turned things around. This thing doesn't test your ability to choose coins at all; it tests human nature.
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GasGuruvip
· 01-08 08:09
Basically, it's still a mindset issue—greed kills.
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AirdropHarvestervip
· 01-08 08:07
This is the psychology of gamblers. It sounds easy, but actually doing it is even harder than reaching the sky. Really, I've seen too many people become overconfident after their first profit, only to lose everything in a single reverse move. The key is that psychological test, probably a hundred times more difficult than technical skills.
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ChainChefvip
· 01-08 07:42
dude the part about waiting four months just to have ONE shot... that's the real recipe right there. most people can't even let their portfolio marinate that long lol
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