#以太坊行情解读 Don't tell people "the principal is too small to matter." I know a trader named Xiao Zhang, who only had 980 in his Wallet, but he borrowed 20 from a fren to make it a full k and entered the market just like that.
Last spring, Xiao Zhang exchanged 140U to come in, with a simple thought: to survive. In the tug-of-war between spot and contract trading, the goal was to increase the principal to over 1000U.
He didn't make any random moves in the past two weeks. He's watching the sector rotation and feeling the market sentiment. He tests small orders of 30U; if he buys right, he adds to his position, and if he buys wrong, he cuts immediately without hesitation.
After a month, 100U turned into 200U, 200U into 400U, and then to 800U. By the weekend, the account had already exceeded 1200U. Xiao Zhang didn’t say much and withdrew 200U, went to the barbecue stall downstairs for a meal, took nine photos and posted in the group: "Eating meat with the money earned, this feeling is different."
But 1200U is not the end point for him, just an entry ticket.
After that, he changed his strategy. The account is divided into three parts: half is placed on the mainstream narrative of popular tracks, 30% is allocated to some fundamentally solid assets for long-term holding, and the remaining 20% is ready to buy the dip or chase the rise at any time.
When the L2 concept was booming, the OP he locked in early rose from 1.2U to 9U, and his account suddenly surged to 80,000U. He didn't get carried away and withdrew 20,000 to buy a refrigerator for his family, leaving the rest to continue running.
This year, the LSD sector has taken off, and he hit it right again. The account has broken through the 900k U mark.
He proposed 100,000 U at the first moment and paid off all the student loans. At the moment he signed, he said his hand was steadier than when he took the college entrance examination.
The core of this story is one sentence: in the cryptocurrency market, leaps are never made by gambling, but by taking every step diligently. Especially in volatile markets, the worst thing is to panic and take reckless actions, which can lead to losing your principal.
The pitfalls and opportunities that Xiao Zhang encountered along the way, I have organized into a reusable logic. The road must be walked by oneself, but if someone gives you a guiding light, the vision will be much clearer.
In the next bull market cycle, I hope more people can use this clarity and patience to turn a k account into six or seven figures.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
12 Likes
Reward
12
3
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
Anon32942
· 3h ago
Damn, this is the story I want to see, there’s no bullshit luck, only the patience to stay alive.
View OriginalReply0
ForumMiningMaster
· 3h ago
Xiao Zhang is really something, borrowing 20 bucks to make up the amount is just amazing, this is what you call "creating conditions without conditions."
900,000 U, from 980 bucks to 900,000, this leap truly breaks many people's inherent perceptions. However, I think the key is still the mindset. Xiao Zhang's execution ability of "cutting loss immediately when making a mistake, never being soft-hearted" is much more important than the amount of principal.
Most people die in hesitation, he died in decisiveness—yet he survived.
View OriginalReply0
UnluckyValidator
· 4h ago
Xiao Zhang's move is a bit aggressive; I just want to know how he maintained his mindset during the fluctuations.
The key is still that logic of testing with 30U; I need to ponder it.
Borrowing 20 bucks to make a thousand at 98 bucks is really outrageous; how desperate or ruthless must one be?
OP went from 1.2 to 9; why didn't I seize this opportunity?
By the way, the strategy of splitting into three parts is indeed more stable; it's much more rational than my all-in approach.
#以太坊行情解读 Don't tell people "the principal is too small to matter." I know a trader named Xiao Zhang, who only had 980 in his Wallet, but he borrowed 20 from a fren to make it a full k and entered the market just like that.
Last spring, Xiao Zhang exchanged 140U to come in, with a simple thought: to survive. In the tug-of-war between spot and contract trading, the goal was to increase the principal to over 1000U.
He didn't make any random moves in the past two weeks. He's watching the sector rotation and feeling the market sentiment. He tests small orders of 30U; if he buys right, he adds to his position, and if he buys wrong, he cuts immediately without hesitation.
After a month, 100U turned into 200U, 200U into 400U, and then to 800U. By the weekend, the account had already exceeded 1200U. Xiao Zhang didn’t say much and withdrew 200U, went to the barbecue stall downstairs for a meal, took nine photos and posted in the group: "Eating meat with the money earned, this feeling is different."
But 1200U is not the end point for him, just an entry ticket.
After that, he changed his strategy. The account is divided into three parts: half is placed on the mainstream narrative of popular tracks, 30% is allocated to some fundamentally solid assets for long-term holding, and the remaining 20% is ready to buy the dip or chase the rise at any time.
When the L2 concept was booming, the OP he locked in early rose from 1.2U to 9U, and his account suddenly surged to 80,000U. He didn't get carried away and withdrew 20,000 to buy a refrigerator for his family, leaving the rest to continue running.
This year, the LSD sector has taken off, and he hit it right again. The account has broken through the 900k U mark.
He proposed 100,000 U at the first moment and paid off all the student loans. At the moment he signed, he said his hand was steadier than when he took the college entrance examination.
The core of this story is one sentence: in the cryptocurrency market, leaps are never made by gambling, but by taking every step diligently. Especially in volatile markets, the worst thing is to panic and take reckless actions, which can lead to losing your principal.
The pitfalls and opportunities that Xiao Zhang encountered along the way, I have organized into a reusable logic. The road must be walked by oneself, but if someone gives you a guiding light, the vision will be much clearer.
In the next bull market cycle, I hope more people can use this clarity and patience to turn a k account into six or seven figures.