To be honest, Gege A never thought that a small fund like 800U could one day grow to over 300,000.


It wasn’t luck, and it wasn’t some kind of magical strategy—just the result of slowly磨ing out your position sizing and timing, piece by piece, and dragging yourself back out of the deepest pit.
My worst time was when my account went from 20kU all the way down to just 300U.
That night I basically didn’t sleep—I just kept watching the chart move. Candles jumped one by one, and my mind felt empty. It wasn’t that I didn’t want to trade; it was that I already didn’t know how to trade.
The next day, the first thing I did after waking up was to stop, then rewrite my rules: no more random trades—only the simplest, most repetitive, and easiest-to-survive setup.
The first phase, from 300U to 3,200U, actually wasn’t some “violent comeback.” It was rather boring. I only did one thing: open a trade only when the trend is clearly defined, with position size kept very light—usually not more than 30%, and I set the stop-loss in advance.
A lot of people look down on this phase because it’s slow and not exciting, but at that time I only had one goal—first, don’t die.
Back then, whenever I had even a bit of profit, I would withdraw part of it right away so the account wouldn’t have a chance to give it back. This phase wasn’t really about making money—it was about rebuilding trust in the market.
The second phase, from 3,200U to 28kU, is when the timing started to come together gradually. I began only doing pullbacks, not chasing highs. After the trend had played out, I would enter in batches with a small position size—and I would only add using profits, not touching the principal.
Many people like to chase the first wave. I did the opposite back then, and it helped me avoid a lot of big drawdowns.
Other people chase in emotion—buying when it’s going up and selling when it’s dropping. I was slowly eating swings in a rhythm.
The third phase, from 28kU to 320kU, the core was no longer “getting the direction right,” but “controlling the structure.”
My positions started to be layered: a base position, a defensive position, and an opportunity position, all managed separately.
When it goes up, I don’t chase. Only when there’s a pullback do I move.
When profits reach 20% to 30%, I first trim part of it to lock in certainty, and then let the rest keep rolling.
Later on, you’ll find that the fastest account growth actually happens when you’re the least emotional.
Many people ask how Gege A avoids getting liquidated and still keeps rolling up. I actually just said one very ordinary line: don’t think about how much you’ll make—first make sure you won’t be eliminated by the market.
If you’re still losing repeatedly and starting over repeatedly, come talk to me—I’ll teach you how to make trading simple.
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