After losing three times with #BTC对标贵金属的竞争格局 , I finally got the hang of it.
I used to be the kind of person deeply immersed in candlestick charts and the theory of fractals, staring at the screen all day to catch indicator signals. And the result? I suffered three consecutive massive losses, which left me feeling defeated. During that time, I didn't want to learn anything; I simply forgot all those "profound" technical analyses and instead adopted the most straightforward strategies in the crypto world.
You might not believe it, but the account has risen from 1700U to 130,000U.
This method sounds silly, but it's logically silly. It breaks down into three actions:
**First Move: Only Eat Breakouts, Treat Everything Else as Air.** Washout, Inducement, Consolidation? Not looking. Once the price strongly breaks through a new high, just enter the market directly. If it's a true breakout, just lay back and enjoy the trend's dividends; if it's a false breakout, stop loss and leave immediately. Here, it's not about predictive ability, but about the intensity of execution and decisiveness in stopping losses.
**Second Tip: Always trade with a small position and take profits quickly.** I have completely eliminated the thought of trading with a large position. For each trade, I use at most 20% of my account; if I make a little profit, I exit. Did I get stopped out? Then I just rest patiently, neither adding to my position, holding on, nor reversing my trades. While others are exhausted from making dozens of trades a day, I only make two or three trades a week and find it much easier.
**Third Strategy: Follow the trend, reject any predictions.** No bottom fishing, no betting on the top, no guessing what the future will hold, just do one thing — continue with the trend. When it rises, I chase the rise; when it falls, I chase the fall. It's that simple. Those who say I "can't draw lines"
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MEVHunterX
· 18h ago
From 1700 to 130,000? This is just lying down and winning, my blood pressure is already high.
No boasting or bashing, the core is just don’t overthink it, right? Stop loss is the key to living longer.
Light Position truly is the second iron rule for making money. I previously stumbled with Heavy Position, and my mindset was shattered.
This logic is so simple it makes me want to laugh, but simple things often make the most money; greed for complexity is the deadliest trap.
Have you ever seen buying the dip lead to bankruptcy? Still, it's better to wait for a breakout to stabilize before entering a position; holding back that urge is really tough.
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JustHereForMemes
· 18h ago
Wow, this guy went from 1700 to 130,000, why do I feel like I've been doing the Reverse all along?
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SignatureCollector
· 18h ago
Oh, it's another story of "I lost three times and finally realized". I've heard it too many times. However, using a Light Position and stop loss strategy is indeed correct; it's just not that easy to execute.
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LiquidityWitch
· 18h ago
Eh, it's that story again from 1700 to 130,000, you guys just love to hear it, right? But honestly, Light Position and stop loss really work; I only understood this after being taught a lesson.
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Ha, is this the legendary "winning without studying"? The key is that it really made money; there’s something to it.
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I’ve tried just eating breakouts, and the worst is when a false breakout plays me for a sucker once, my mindset collapses, looks like I still have to be tough.
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Following the trend sounds easy, but most people still can’t help but want to buy the dip; that’s human nature.
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Can lying down with a Light Position really win? I feel like I’m a living specimen of Heavy Position + frequent + random operations.
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Unbelievable, they actually simplified complex things into these three tricks; what the crypto world lacks most is this kind of straightforwardness.
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I’m a bit suspicious of survivor bias, but this logic of decisive stop loss really has no flaws.
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The trick of taking small profits and running is the hardest; who doesn’t want to double their money? Greed really is poison.
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Chase the price and chase the short? Isn’t this just chasing momentum? The problem is how to judge whether the trend is really continuing or about to reverse.
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Damn, I should have given up on Technical Analysis earlier; I had to mess around until I was bankrupt to wake up.
After losing three times with #BTC对标贵金属的竞争格局 , I finally got the hang of it.
I used to be the kind of person deeply immersed in candlestick charts and the theory of fractals, staring at the screen all day to catch indicator signals. And the result? I suffered three consecutive massive losses, which left me feeling defeated. During that time, I didn't want to learn anything; I simply forgot all those "profound" technical analyses and instead adopted the most straightforward strategies in the crypto world.
You might not believe it, but the account has risen from 1700U to 130,000U.
This method sounds silly, but it's logically silly. It breaks down into three actions:
**First Move: Only Eat Breakouts, Treat Everything Else as Air.** Washout, Inducement, Consolidation? Not looking. Once the price strongly breaks through a new high, just enter the market directly. If it's a true breakout, just lay back and enjoy the trend's dividends; if it's a false breakout, stop loss and leave immediately. Here, it's not about predictive ability, but about the intensity of execution and decisiveness in stopping losses.
**Second Tip: Always trade with a small position and take profits quickly.** I have completely eliminated the thought of trading with a large position. For each trade, I use at most 20% of my account; if I make a little profit, I exit. Did I get stopped out? Then I just rest patiently, neither adding to my position, holding on, nor reversing my trades. While others are exhausted from making dozens of trades a day, I only make two or three trades a week and find it much easier.
**Third Strategy: Follow the trend, reject any predictions.** No bottom fishing, no betting on the top, no guessing what the future will hold, just do one thing — continue with the trend. When it rises, I chase the rise; when it falls, I chase the fall. It's that simple. Those who say I "can't draw lines"