The story of the crypto world turning around is being played out every day, but there are not many who can explain how to survive. Two months ago, there was a fan account with only 1800U left. Instead of betting it all in frustration, he calmed down and rethought his strategy. What was the final result? The account rose to 30,000.
His first step was to divide the money into three parts, with each part being 600U. It sounds simple, but this is the difference between surviving and being liquidated.
**Three-Pillar Fund Management**
First edition: For short-term trading. A maximum of two trades per day, take profits and run, cut losses if you lose. Don't fantasize about being able to accurately catch the bottom; the market's rhythm is faster than you.
Second part: Trend trading. This money requires patience; do not trade when the weekly chart has not confirmed an upward trend. Many people lose money here because they always want to catch every fluctuation, and as a result, they end up being cut like leeks.
Third part: emergency funds. Keep in the account to replenish at any time, especially when on the brink of liquidation. Being liquidated is like amputation; you might grow back a finger, but if your head is chopped off, it's completely over.
**The signal is straightforward**
The daily moving average hasn't formed a rising pattern yet? Then don't touch it. If you don't have a position, what are you waiting for? Wait for an opportunity.
The trading volume has broken through previous highs, and the daily closing has confirmed this; this is the first entry signal. After entering, what to do? When the profit reaches 30% of the principal, immediately withdraw half. For the remaining position, set a 10% trailing stop loss and let the market make the decision for you.
New cars come to the market every minute, missing this bus is not a big deal. Many people fail because of the mindset of "I must catch this bus."
**The mindset is the real skill**
Before entering the market, write down your bottom line. Stop loss at 5%, cut it when it reaches that point, no negotiation on a single cent. When you have a profit of 10%, move the stop loss to the cost price, and the rest is pure profit.
From 1800 to 30,000, to put it bluntly, it's not a trading secret, it's just about making fewer mistakes. Having opportunities doesn't mean having money; funds are always scarce. Most people lose money because they push all their chips onto the betting table.
Surviving is the only way to qualify to talk about making money. If you are dead, you are just a transaction fee in someone else's account. The crypto market has never rewarded the fastest runners; it only rewards those who can endure until the end. Those who make money are the ones who truly start when most people have already exited.
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ChainWanderingPoet
· 12h ago
To be honest, this trap theory sounds nice, but very few can actually execute it. I tried the three-part funding method, but I still couldn't hold back my hands during the second trend trading.
Surviving is indeed the top priority, there's no doubt about that. Most of those who cleared their accounts ended up ruining themselves because of greed.
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Rugman_Walking
· 12h ago
The three-part fund allocation method sounds impressive, but it's really just about not being greedy... From 1800 to 30,000, how many people lost it all by going all in? This guy is really calm.
The story of the crypto world turning around is being played out every day, but there are not many who can explain how to survive. Two months ago, there was a fan account with only 1800U left. Instead of betting it all in frustration, he calmed down and rethought his strategy. What was the final result? The account rose to 30,000.
His first step was to divide the money into three parts, with each part being 600U. It sounds simple, but this is the difference between surviving and being liquidated.
**Three-Pillar Fund Management**
First edition: For short-term trading. A maximum of two trades per day, take profits and run, cut losses if you lose. Don't fantasize about being able to accurately catch the bottom; the market's rhythm is faster than you.
Second part: Trend trading. This money requires patience; do not trade when the weekly chart has not confirmed an upward trend. Many people lose money here because they always want to catch every fluctuation, and as a result, they end up being cut like leeks.
Third part: emergency funds. Keep in the account to replenish at any time, especially when on the brink of liquidation. Being liquidated is like amputation; you might grow back a finger, but if your head is chopped off, it's completely over.
**The signal is straightforward**
The daily moving average hasn't formed a rising pattern yet? Then don't touch it. If you don't have a position, what are you waiting for? Wait for an opportunity.
The trading volume has broken through previous highs, and the daily closing has confirmed this; this is the first entry signal. After entering, what to do? When the profit reaches 30% of the principal, immediately withdraw half. For the remaining position, set a 10% trailing stop loss and let the market make the decision for you.
New cars come to the market every minute, missing this bus is not a big deal. Many people fail because of the mindset of "I must catch this bus."
**The mindset is the real skill**
Before entering the market, write down your bottom line. Stop loss at 5%, cut it when it reaches that point, no negotiation on a single cent. When you have a profit of 10%, move the stop loss to the cost price, and the rest is pure profit.
From 1800 to 30,000, to put it bluntly, it's not a trading secret, it's just about making fewer mistakes. Having opportunities doesn't mean having money; funds are always scarce. Most people lose money because they push all their chips onto the betting table.
Surviving is the only way to qualify to talk about making money. If you are dead, you are just a transaction fee in someone else's account. The crypto market has never rewarded the fastest runners; it only rewards those who can endure until the end. Those who make money are the ones who truly start when most people have already exited.