Sharing some practical insights from my experience in the crypto world, which might be helpful for beginners.
**Step 1: 200 bucks as tuition** With 7,000 yuan left in my account, I reluctantly converted it into 1,000 USDT. But I didn't foolishly put it all in at once; I started with 200 USDT for practice. I focused on small coins with high volatility that day, and when they doubled, I sold immediately. If I lost 50 USDT, I cut my losses. After several wins like this, my principal gradually grew to 500 USDT.
The key is small-scale trial and error combined with disciplined execution—no greed, no holding, and don’t let emotions control your account.
**Step 2: Stop after earning 1000 USDT** The hardest part is never the technique but controlling your own hand. Every time I hit a profit of over 1000 USDT, I forcibly stop trading for 24 hours, review my trading records, and stay away from the market. Many people get overexcited after making some profit, and a wave of correction wipes it all out, sometimes doubling their losses. The crypto market is a 24-hour battlefield, but your mind must be periodically reset.
**Step 3: Three-part allocation** Once your funds reach a certain size, I use this portfolio approach:
- Short-term quick trades: 40% — chasing current hot coins, always setting stop-losses, and taking profits of 5%-10% in batches. - Long-term dollar-cost averaging: 30% — monthly investments in Bitcoin and Ethereum, ignoring short-term volatility, just slowly accumulating chips. - Cash reserves: 30% — kept as an "ammunition reserve" to buy the dip during market crashes.
This way, you can seize opportunities while enduring volatility, avoiding full positions that miss out or get trapped.
**Step 4: Four iron rules** - Never go all-in — always keep 20% cash to guard against black swan events. - Always set stop-losses on every trade — stop-loss isn’t about admitting defeat, but about pricing the opportunity cost of mistakes. - Don’t chase highs or bottom-fish — if the perfect entry point isn’t available, just wait; no need to participate in every wave. - Review is more important than trading — reflecting during losses is the deepest learning; this tuition is worth it.
Money in crypto is easy to make, but surviving and earning steadily is even harder than making quick gains.
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GasWaster69
· 01-19 19:39
Exactly, I have deep experience with the 200U tuition fee part. You really have to pay the tuition to understand.
But the last sentence hits the hardest: earning money while alive is indeed much harder than earning it quickly.
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ruggedNotShrugged
· 01-19 19:37
It makes sense, but executing it is really damn hard. I'm the kind of idiot who gets carried away after making a little profit.
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DAOdreamer
· 01-19 19:36
Wow, this mindset is really incredible. It's just that the lack of self-discipline makes it hard for those people to accept.
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BoredApeResistance
· 01-19 19:36
That's quite straightforward, but I can't do the 24-hour forced position closure. I always fail at it, haha.
Sharing some practical insights from my experience in the crypto world, which might be helpful for beginners.
**Step 1: 200 bucks as tuition**
With 7,000 yuan left in my account, I reluctantly converted it into 1,000 USDT. But I didn't foolishly put it all in at once; I started with 200 USDT for practice. I focused on small coins with high volatility that day, and when they doubled, I sold immediately. If I lost 50 USDT, I cut my losses. After several wins like this, my principal gradually grew to 500 USDT.
The key is small-scale trial and error combined with disciplined execution—no greed, no holding, and don’t let emotions control your account.
**Step 2: Stop after earning 1000 USDT**
The hardest part is never the technique but controlling your own hand. Every time I hit a profit of over 1000 USDT, I forcibly stop trading for 24 hours, review my trading records, and stay away from the market. Many people get overexcited after making some profit, and a wave of correction wipes it all out, sometimes doubling their losses. The crypto market is a 24-hour battlefield, but your mind must be periodically reset.
**Step 3: Three-part allocation**
Once your funds reach a certain size, I use this portfolio approach:
- Short-term quick trades: 40% — chasing current hot coins, always setting stop-losses, and taking profits of 5%-10% in batches.
- Long-term dollar-cost averaging: 30% — monthly investments in Bitcoin and Ethereum, ignoring short-term volatility, just slowly accumulating chips.
- Cash reserves: 30% — kept as an "ammunition reserve" to buy the dip during market crashes.
This way, you can seize opportunities while enduring volatility, avoiding full positions that miss out or get trapped.
**Step 4: Four iron rules**
- Never go all-in — always keep 20% cash to guard against black swan events.
- Always set stop-losses on every trade — stop-loss isn’t about admitting defeat, but about pricing the opportunity cost of mistakes.
- Don’t chase highs or bottom-fish — if the perfect entry point isn’t available, just wait; no need to participate in every wave.
- Review is more important than trading — reflecting during losses is the deepest learning; this tuition is worth it.
Money in crypto is easy to make, but surviving and earning steadily is even harder than making quick gains.