My trading accounts are basically divided into short-term and mid-term categories, and I make this very clear when posting—whether I am doing trend-following for short-term gains, or laying in wait for reversals to go long, or even discussing short-selling strategies. The purpose of this is simple: to let followers know what they are participating in.



Taking GAS as an example, the unrealized profit has already exceeded 50 points earlier, and now the pullback is only about 5 points. I’m not bragging—there are plenty of people who can easily multiply their positions tenfold in futures trading, but I choose not to take the high-leverage route. Why? Because I always adhere to one principle: capital safety always comes first.

What does this trading record indicate? My win rate is roughly stable at around 60%. GAS has been fluctuating for two days, but it has never broken below my cost line. At this point, posting here shows that the probability of short-term success is quite high. The problem is, some people stubbornly hold on without stop-loss after receiving signals, only to blame the market when it reverses. I strongly dislike this attitude—trading signals are just a game of probabilities, and stop-loss is a bottom-line discipline.

Regarding the doubts about the earnings from posting, I want to say: my earnings are already pinned at the top, the numbers are right there. It’s been a long time since I started posting, and I only make a few cents. Many popular posts have dozens of comments, but the accumulated earnings are minimal. If you think I call signals just for content revenue, do the math yourself and you’ll see.

Some also say I haven’t made my real trading account links public. The reason is straightforward: I mainly trade small-cap coins, doing a dozen trades a day is normal. Under this operation mode, segmenting capital with isolated accounts would be very inefficient. I use a full-position drag mode, which inevitably means I might participate in multiple altcoins from a certain whale’s holdings. My posts do impact the capital pool. But this also means that if some opponents target me, the risk of liquidation skyrockets. Currently, my single position already accounts for 50% of my capital, and I don’t want to invite trouble by sharing real account links publicly.

Trading is like this—strategy, capital management, and psychological resilience are all essential. Grow together, but the premise is that you must first protect your own capital.
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OptionWhisperervip
· 5h ago
Stop-loss is really a fundamental skill; too many people hold on stubbornly and end up giving back all their profits. A 60% win rate is actually quite solid; the key is to survive longer. I understand not sharing public links, after all, grinding on small dogs with ten or more trades a day, exposing your position is just asking for trouble. Prioritizing the safety of your principal is more important than anything else. Honestly, not many traders manage risk properly; most are stuck in a gambler's mentality. I understand, placing large orders across the board can indeed impact the market, and being targeted can lead to a blow-up. Maintaining a 60% win rate steadily already puts you ahead of most people; don’t listen to those bragging about making a fortune daily. Discipline in stop-loss > all strategies; without this bottom line, trading is just gambling. That small profit split isn’t really worth risking your reputation just to shout signals.
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ShamedApeSellervip
· 5h ago
Stop-loss discipline is truly the watershed; most people get killed here.
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OnChainArchaeologistvip
· 5h ago
A 60% win rate sounds pretty good, but those who stubbornly refuse to cut losses are really something else. Before blaming others, look in the mirror.
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FlashLoanLarryvip
· 5h ago
nah the "60% winrate" thing is just capital utilization math dressed up different... dude's basically admitting he's concentrating risk lol
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BlockchainWorkervip
· 5h ago
A 60% win rate sounds okay, but the real profit doesn't come from the win rate; it comes from discipline in stop-losses. People who don't cut losses deserve to lose, I agree with that. I understand not showing real trading results, but the strategy of dragging orders with full position size itself carries quite a bit of risk, right?
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