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#MyGateTradeStory
ENTERING WITH HIGH LEVERAGE AND OVERCONFIDENCE
One of the most important lessons I’ve learned in trading didn’t come from a bad strategy or a lack of knowledge. It came from overconfidence.
When I first started trading, I was extremely careful. I analyzed charts, respected risk management, and kept my leverage low. My focus was on protecting capital and learning from every trade. Over time, a series of successful trades began to change my mindset. My confidence grew, and I started believing I had a better understanding of the market than I actually did.
That confidence slowly turned into overconfidence.
I remember one particular trade that taught me this lesson the hard way. The market was showing strong momentum, volume was increasing, and bullish sentiment was everywhere. Traders were sharing optimistic predictions, and many believed a major move was about to happen.
After reviewing the chart, I felt convinced. The trend looked strong, the structure seemed healthy, and everything appeared to support a bullish position. Normally, I would have entered with moderate leverage, but this time I decided to increase it.
Not because my trading plan required it.
Not because the setup was unique.
Simply because I felt confident.
At first, the decision seemed brilliant. The market moved in my favor almost immediately. My position was in profit, and seeing the numbers rise gave me a powerful sense of satisfaction. The more profit I saw, the more certain I became that I had made the right decision.
That was the moment I stopped thinking about risk.
Instead of asking what could go wrong, I started imagining how much more I could make.
Then the market changed.
The move began slowing down. Price started showing weakness, but I ignored the warning signs. I convinced myself it was only a temporary pullback. As the market continued moving against me, I refused to accept that my original idea might be wrong.
I kept holding.
I searched for reasons to stay in the trade rather than reasons to exit it.
The higher leverage made everything worse. Every small move felt emotional. I wasn’t analyzing the market objectively anymore—I was hoping.
And hope is not a trading strategy.
Eventually, the position closed at a significant loss.
The money I lost hurt, but the lesson was far more valuable. When I reviewed the trade later, I realized the problem wasn’t the setup itself. The real problem was believing that confidence justified taking more risk.
I had confused confidence with certainty.
I had forgotten that even the best-looking setups can fail.
Since then, I’ve completely changed the way I approach trading. I no longer increase leverage because a setup “feels” perfect. Risk is determined before I enter a trade, not while I’m feeling excited about it. Every position has a clear plan, and every decision is based on rules rather than emotions.
One habit has helped me more than anything else: whenever I feel extremely confident about a trade, I become more cautious, not less.
Because the market doesn’t reward confidence.
It rewards discipline.
Looking back, I’m grateful for that experience. It taught me that trading isn’t about proving you’re right. It’s about protecting your capital, managing risk, and staying in the game long enough to grow.
Now before every trade, I ask myself one simple question:
“Am I increasing risk because my strategy says so, or because my ego wants me to?”
That question has saved me from making the same mistake again.
#MyGateTradingMoment
#我的Gate交易时刻
@Gate_Square