Why do the novices I guide end up consistently making steady profits without getting liquidated? Not long ago, I took on a complete newbie who started with 2400U. In two months, he managed to grow it to 300kU, and now his account sits steadily above 170kU, without a single liquidation throughout the entire process.



Some say it's luck, but I don't agree. Two months of smooth sailing like this—how can luck be that precise? His turnaround didn't come from insider info or pinpointing tops and bottoms; it came from three core principles I drilled into him—the same principles that took me from 7,000U to financial freedom.

Rule #1: Never go all in—always leave yourself an exit.
I had him split his 2,400U into three parts: 700U for day trading, at most one trade a day, take profits and run; 700U for swing trading, only chasing major trends, ignoring noise; and the remaining 600U as a backup, to be used as a lifeline in critical moments, otherwise left untouched. Most people lose money because they go all in from the start, blocking every escape route. The first iron law of crypto: survive first, then talk about profits.

Rule #2: Trade less, rest more, only take high-probability plays.
80% of the time in crypto, the market is ranging. Constant trading just feeds fees to the exchange. My rule is simple: during consolidation, stay flat; only trade trends with clear direction and strong breakouts. Once profits hit 20% of principal, withdraw some to lock in gains, never go all in chasing more. Those who truly make big money can endure boredom. Don't strike unless you're sure—when you do strike, make it count.

Rule #3: Kick out emotions—execute like a machine.
The biggest enemy for retail traders isn't the market—it's their own greed and regret. I made him stick to it ruthlessly: cut losses at the stop-loss level, never hold; reduce positions when profit targets are hit, never average down; write the rules on paper beforehand, and just execute without any emotion.

A small principal isn't scary—what's scary is always wanting to get rich overnight. Going from 2,400U to 300kU didn't rely on pinpoint entries; it relied on locking down risk first, then steady compounding. If you often get stuck, love to go all in, get liquidated easily, or can't read trends, come to me. I'll personally teach you position sizing, risk management, and rhythm, helping you save years of trial and error.
#0成本拿2股SK海力士
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QueueJumper
· 3h ago
The third point about writing it down and executing is too real. Last year, I held onto a losing position until it went to zero. Managing emotions is ten times harder than technical analysis.
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SeeingTheChainThroughTheFog
· 3h ago
700U requires taking just one order per day for intraday trading—this level of discipline is something most newcomers simply can’t maintain; anyone who can actually execute it isn’t a complete beginner anymore.
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GateUser-0c86a4c9
· 3h ago
170K USDT is after the retracement, indicating that the 300K USDT in the middle wasn't taken profit, and the second rule wasn't fully executed either, but the overall framework is indeed worth learning.
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ShortPositionsAtTheElevator
· 3h ago
Split positions + mechanical execution, this system is indeed stable, but from 2400U to 300kU in two months—if you say there's no luck involved in this return rate, do you really believe it yourself?
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