Have you noticed that in the same market cycle, some people make several times—or even more than ten times—while others keep losing along the way? Where exactly does the gap come from?


It’s really two words: rolling the margin.
When done right, it’s compounding growth. When done wrong, it’s a quick liquidation. Real rolling the margin isn’t about increasing risk; it’s eight words: principal stays put, and profits roll forward.
For example, if your account has 100k USDT, you don’t put everything in from the start. You take part of the position to participate. After the move plays out, you expand gains using the profits you’ve already made, instead of constantly risking the principal. The benefit is that even if the market changes, your losses mainly come from profits, and the principal still has a chance to restart.
Many people lose money not because they can’t analyze the market, but because they don’t understand position sizing. When prices rise, they don’t dare to hold and don’t dare to add. When prices fall, they keep adding—getting deeper and deeper into trouble. In the end, they miss the main rally, but the range-bound market consumes both their capital and their patience.
The market that’s truly suitable for rolling the margin must meet certain conditions:
Clear trend, continuous inflow of funds, and concentrated market hot spots.
Don’t touch just any coin—only trade the strong direction you can actually understand. For example, after breaking a key level, first test with a small position; once the trend is confirmed, then gradually increase position size using profits. If the trend breaks, take profit and exit in time. Don’t guess the top, don’t buy the bottom—only make money that belongs to the trend.
Roll profits, take profit in batches, and strictly follow the plan.
Opportunities are everywhere every day, but principal only comes once.
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