I want to talk with you about how contract trading in the crypto market should be played so you can keep walking forward with your money feeling secure.



Seven years ago, I entered the market with $4,000. Back then, I couldn’t even figure out where to adjust leverage. Now my account is calmly sitting on eight-figure numbers. Looking back, my heart is full of mixed emotions!

But this isn’t luck—it’s because I figured out the “survival playbook.”
I tested with $1,000: each time I put in $300 to trade a 100x contract.
When the leverage is good, a 1% move can double you; when it’s bad, you can go to zero overnight. That’s why I remember these five rules at all times, and I’m sharing them with you.

First: Cut immediately when you’re wrong—don’t stubbornly hold on.
When I was new, I got liquidated twice. I kept thinking I could wait for a rebound and get back to even. But the market doesn’t wait for anyone—waiting just makes you lose more.
Once you reach the stop-loss level, you leave. Staying alive means you get another chance. There’s no need to keep fighting the market to prove you’re right.

Second: Stop after five straight losing trades.
Sometimes the market runs around like a headless fly. Stubbornly grinding just wrecks your mindset.
I set a rule for myself: after five straight losses, close the software and rest. Check again the next day—many times, the trap from the previous day is already gone.

Third: Once you’ve made $500, withdraw ASAP.
No matter how good the numbers look on your screen, they’re still just virtual. The market flips faster than turning pages.
Every time I earn $500, I withdraw at least half. Winning is getting profits out and cashing them in.

Fourth: Only trade one-direction moves—when it’s ranging, lie flat.
When a trend comes, 100x leverage can lift you up into the sky.
But when it’s going sideways, this leverage is a knife for cutting scalps.
When there’s no direction, it’s better to do nothing than to start clicking orders out of impatience.

Fifth: Don’t let position size exceed 10% of your principal.
Never go all-in like a gambler. Keep the position light—then when messy volatility hits, you can stay calm and handle it calmly.
Going all-in is like cramming ten plates at a self-serve buffet—the last plate will definitely make you feel awful.

Follow Brother Yi, no bragging and no empty promises—just sharing real-world experience that helps you survive in this space. If you’re still repeatedly losing and repeatedly starting over, come talk to me—I’ll teach you how to make trading simple.

#LAB两日腰斩53%
#GateUS合规扩展佛罗里达
#世界杯冠军预测
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments