Liquidation—no, it’s not because you can’t read the K-line.


A lot of people lose money precisely because they want to win too badly.
As soon as the market moves a little, they can’t help but go all-in to rush in.
When it drops, they keep imagining a rebound and don’t cut losses.
When it rises, they’re afraid of missing out and疯狂追进去(keep chasing in).
So what happens in the end?
You may have guessed the direction right, but the account is gone first.
Over the years of crawling and grinding in the market, my biggest takeaway is:
Rolling capital isn’t something you can gamble into.
It’s something you grow slowly by staying alive.
Remember this one line:
Use profits to bet on opportunities—don’t use your principal to gamble your life.
First, use a small position to test and work out the direction.
Then, use the money you earned to expand your gains.
If you’re wrong, exit with a small loss;
if you’re right, let the profits run.
It sounds simple—almost a bit foolish.
But what truly stays for the long term is exactly this “foolish” method.
I’ve never been afraid of getting the market call wrong.
What I’m afraid of is—being wrong and still stubbornly holding to the end.
The most dangerous people in the market are never the ones who can’t analyze.
It’s the ones who refuse to admit defeat and always think they can turn it around in one shot.
Your principal is your confidence.
Your profits are your weapon.
When the setup comes, use profits to amplify returns.
When the market is wrong, first protect yourself.
In the end, trading isn’t about who can charge the fastest.
It’s about who can keep staying at the table.
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