Most people stumble in contracts not because the market is difficult or their skills are lacking,

but because from the very first trade, they put themselves on the edge.

All-in.

They think all-in = resistance to volatility, making it less likely to blow up.

But the truth is: the more casually you go all-in, the faster you blow up.

I've seen too many people, as soon as their account has a bit of money, they start to float,

with a balance of 5000U, daring to throw 3500U at a short trade all at once.

As soon as the market shakes a little, “bam,” the entire position evaporates,

the system is particularly decisive, with no time to react.

They say “going all-in is safer,” but in reality, they are betting their lives, not just their positions.

With the same 10x leverage, some earn steadily while others are wiped out overnight.

The difference isn't the leverage, but how the position is allocated and how to withdraw when things go wrong.

Let me give you the simplest comparison:

You have 1000U, and you take 100U to open a 50x position, high risk? Yes.

But if you're wrong, you can run, you can cut losses, you can save your life.

But if you take 900U to open a 10x position, it looks like a lower multiple, but the risk is full scale.

If the market shakes a bit, your entire account could go down with it.

So stop asking “what leverage is safer?”

What truly determines whether you can survive is: how much position did you take in this trade?

Do you have a stop loss? Can you bear the loss?

Right now, I still use all-in in contracts,

but there are three iron rules:

1️⃣ Use at most 20% of your position for a single trade.

2️⃣ The stop loss is always set — losses should not exceed 3% of total capital.

3️⃣ Do not open a position when the market is shaky, emotions are high, and the direction is unclear.

These three rules sound simple, but the vast majority of people cannot follow them. Those who can't will always be giving their heads in contracts.

Remember one thing: contracts do not test how much you can earn, they test whether you can survive.

If you want stability, if you want to live, if you want to turn things around, it's not about courage, and it's certainly not about luck,

but whether someone can guide you to set the rhythm, position, and direction correctly.

If your account is stuck, uncertain, fearful, not daring to place trades, and getting more chaotic,

it's not that you can't do it, it's that you're not following the right person.

The market is still moving, and opportunities are still there.

What you're missing is not the market, but someone who can help you stabilize.

Not everyone can turn 5000 into 120,000,

but as long as you are willing to take that step,

at least you won’t be spinning your wheels anymore.

If you want to communicate, feel free to reach out.

On the road of cryptocurrency, being able to stabilize you is more important than making you take off. $ZEC