Gege’s June contract live-trading summary is here👇 In June, we executed 26 trades and took 5 days off. We stopped out 4 trades and took profit on 22, with a win rate of 84.61% and cumulative returns of 7559.19%. Trading isn’t about how much you make from one or two trades—it’s about whether you can sustain stable profitability in the long run. This performance report from June is the best proof. The market offers opportunities every day—just steadily capture the portion of profit that belongs to you. Keep working hard in July, and keep going!💪 If you’re still chasing breakouts and getting in and out impulsively, or you don’t know how to judge entry and exit points, come to the chat room to talk with me.
Binance has now launched a new feature— you can chat with other users via private messages directly within the platform. If you need to connect or have questions, you can scan the QR code below to add. Your profile bio also includes a chat ID—search by the ID to add “Gege.” Trading follow-up discussions: Binance official chat room👇
In the crypto world, if you want to earn your first bucket of gold, it’s really these eight words: Don’t be greedy for small gains; don’t hold on through big losses. $ETH Everyone understands the truth, but fewer than one out of ten can actually do it. I’ve seen too many of these situations: Someone puts in 50,000 yuan. When it rises to 53,000, they panic and run, feeling great about a 6% profit. Then the coin price keeps climbing all the way to 68,000—an uninterrupted 30% profit, right there in front of them as they watch. He grits his teeth: “Next time, I’ll definitely hold!” $BTC But when the price falls back to 50,000, or even drops to 47,000, they can’t take it and immediately cut losses. Back and forth like this, they get stuck on two words: afraid of missing out, and afraid of drawdowns. To earn your first bucket of gold in the crypto market, you must break these two emotions. $LAB Right now I basically use these three ideas, which are more practical: First, prioritize picks that have already dropped enough and are starting to stabilize. Don’t chase new-coin hype hotspots, and don’t dive into the bottom as soon as it drops. Start by testing with a 10% small position, then add slowly once the trend stabilizes and the structure looks better. The pace is slower, but you’ll live longer. Second, wait until the trend is clear, then add to the position during a pullback. I don’t like copying the absolute bottom. I’d rather be late, wait until the direction is clear before entering. The cost might be higher, but at least you won’t be deeply trapped immediately after buying. Small losses can be cut; big losses can be fatal. Third, after it rises for a while, lock in part of the profit first. When the market starts moving, I’ll get my principal back first, and then use the remaining position to bet on the upside space. Once it reaches my preset take-profit level, I leave—no obsessing over “how much more it might still rise.” Profits that truly land in your pocket will always just be numbers on a screen. I once brought a friend along. He had suffered pretty badly before. After adjusting with this method for half a year, not only did he basically recover his previous losses, he also truly realized part of his profits. The crypto world never lacks smart people—what it lacks is people who can control their own hands. If you always enter late—if everything you buy gets stuck and everything you hold keeps dropping—then the problem is most likely not the market, but your method and execution. If you want to earn your first bucket of gold, first engrave those eight words—“Don’t be greedy for small gains; don’t hold on through big losses”—into your trading plan. If you execute properly, time will naturally give you the answer. Are you still stubbornly holding on now, or have you started learning how to take profits? If you’re still confused, feel free to come chat. I’m always here—if you want to improve, I’ll accompany you forward together.
In the crypto world, from 1,500U to 15,000U, you only need to stick to these three “iron laws.”$BTC Three months ago, when Wang Sicong found me, his account only had 1,500U left. I gave him just the simplest, most ruthless method. He doubted it at first, but followed it for three months. $BTC He split the 1,500U into three equal parts: 500U each, and executed the rules strictly: 1. Short-term trading pocket (500U) Daily max of only 2 trades. Cut positions and leave immediately—never linger. Make small profits, train your feel. 2. Trend trading pocket (500U)$EVAA No clear uptrend—no entry. If the weekly chart doesn’t go well, just “play dead” and don’t touch a single trade. 3. Emergency pocket (500U) Used specifically for adding positions in extreme market conditions or liquidating. Liquidating is like “amputation”—saving your life matters most; risking everything on the gamble is truly a path to irreversible ruin. The market is a meat grinder—99% of people die by greed and emotions. I only eat the meat of trends. The rest of the time, I earn some side dishes with short-term trades and never hard-fight. My entry iron law is very simple: • Moving averages don’t turn upward → stay decisively in cash • Only enter when the volume breaks above the previous high + the candlestick close confirms • When profit reaches 30% → immediately withdraw half; set the remaining portion with a 10% trailing stop-loss Before entering, you must first write down the “life-and-death rules”: Stop-loss of 5% means you must cut it; if you reach 10% profit, pull the stop-loss back to break-even. The crypto world has never been about getting rich overnight through some kind of god-level trading. It’s about making fewer mistakes and living longer. Only by surviving do you have the right to talk about wealth. The crypto market is always short on opportunities—not; it’s always full of chances. What’s missing is people who can stick to rules and control their emotions. I only trade with real accounts—I don’t play pretend. If you want to steadily avoid pitfalls and profit reliably in the crypto world, and you don’t want to keep stumbling around in the dark alone, you can follow the pace and walk with me.
A follower brother has been following my way of thinking. Every month he makes steady profits—until yesterday when he DM’d me: “I lost terribly again.”$LAB
I asked him what happened. He said, “Bro, I just can’t control my hand. When it rises, I want to rush in. When I lose, I want to save it. The more I trade, the more messed up it gets…” I only replied to him with one line: “You’re not the first, and you won’t be the last.”$ETH
If you’ve been in the crypto world long enough, you’ll understand—what truly ruins a person is never the market. It’s those three ghosts in your mind.
First ghost: wanting to grab everything$BTC You always feel that every move in the market should belong to you. Missing a wave feels like you’ve lost hundreds of millions. You can’t get it out of your head, can’t sleep. But the market isn’t your partner. The more anxious you are, the less it gives you.
Second ghost: wanting revenge after a loss As soon as a position explodes, before your brain has even cooled down, your hand is already clicking in. You silently tell yourself: “I’ll win it back and then leave.” What happens? In most cases, you end up sacrificing not only the profit—you even dump your principal. The “rescue” turns into going deeper.
Third ghost: getting cocky after making a little money After winning two or three trades, you start thinking you’re a god. Everyone else looks like “just retail fodder.” You tell yourself, “That’s all this market is like.” But really, it’s just that the trend happened to hand you a bite of food. It has nothing to do with your ability.
I was the same before. I thought trading depended on courage, ruthlessness, and knowing the news.
After the market repeatedly educated me, I finally saw it clearly: Real courage is being able to sit still in cash when you should be flat. Real courage is being able to cut losses when you need to admit you’re wrong. While everyone else is charging into madness, you dare to stand there and do nothing.
The market’s first lesson to me was losing money. The second was shutting up. The third was going toe-to-toe with myself.
Now I only trust one saying: Markets never favor the smart—they only favor the patient. You can understand, but you don’t rush to act; You can hold, but you don’t get cocky; You can afford to lose, but you don’t go crazy; You can wait, but you’re not panicked. Do these, and then you truly count as being in the business.
At what moment did you suddenly realize: the thing you lose in trading is never the money—it’s your own heart? Tell your story in the comments. Maybe the next second you’ll be able to save another brother who’s about to collapse.
Follow Fage. No boasting, no empty promises—just sharing real-world trading experience that can help you survive in this circle. If you’re still losing again and again, starting over again and again, come talk to me—I’ll teach you how to make trading simple.
Fight one kind of market, and profits are actually this simple$EVAA
In the past, I was the “grass” that everyone harvested.
In the morning, if prices went up, I chased them. In the afternoon, even a slight pullback scared me and I cut and exited. When I saw others posting screenshots of profits, I blindly followed and switched strategies—switching between short-term and long-term trades constantly. I studied every kind of technical indicator and battle-tested strategy, yet I got deeper and deeper into it, losing so badly it was almost unbearable.$LAB
Only later did I realize it wasn’t that my skills were lacking or that I hadn’t worked hard enough—it was greed driving me. I always wanted to catch every market move, to miss nothing. On the surface, I watched the charts every day with intense diligence, but in reality my hands were not in control—my emotions were. My trading turned into chaos, a complete mess.$ETH
After reflecting deeply, I decisively discarded all the complicated methods and kept only one set of market-handling strategy that I’m most comfortable with.
Unless my own trading signal appears, even if the market is surging, I’ll never get excited and I’ll never participate. Once the signal arrives, I execute immediately—no hesitation, no doubt.
If there’s no matching market setup, I’m at peace with staying in cash. While others疯狂地 chase the price higher, I calmly observe. Even if there are no trades for days, I’m still not anxious at all.
Slowly, my mindset stabilized and my rhythm became clear—and profits became steady too.
In the end, you don’t need to learn all those fancy tricks. A true expert isn’t someone with lots of methods, but someone who repeatedly practices a single reliable logic again and again.
When the market jumps, don’t get arrogant. When you miss the move, don’t get annoyed. Just wait for the familiar signals and trade only the situations you can actually understand. If you stick to this principle, the market will treat you as steady as Mount Tai.
If you’re still confused, feel free to talk—I’m here. As long as you want to improve, I’ll walk forward with you.
$EVAA Finally figured out the “pump-and-dump” tactics behind this altcoin game. All the small-cap coin tricks are exposed
Recently, EVAA has really made me sick—this trading setup is practically textbook-level. In the early stage, it made a small rise around 1.6, printing several short-term rebound green candles, deliberately creating the illusion of a bottoming reversal to lure a large number of bottom-fishing retail investors into the trade as bag-holders.$ETH
After the follow-on crowd had taken enough shares, the main players had no hesitation and immediately launched a chain of waterfall drops. In 24 hours, it plunged 31.5%, crashing from the recent high near 2.9 straight down to around 1.85. Anyone who entered at the high instantly got deeply trapped. Looking at the 1-hour chart, the MACD has already formed a clear dead cross, bearish momentum is still more than enough, and there’s basically no sign of stabilization in the short term.$BTC
What’s most terrifying about these small-cap sh—altcoins is exactly this: there’s no long-term institutional capital propping it up. Any upside is purely the short-term “hot money” pumping to distribute. Every rise isn’t a real reversal—it’s just to smash the market and dump, again and again, harvesting retail chasers who buy higher after being baited.
At the moment, the only strong support is around the prior low of 1.59. Once that level is broken by the bears, downside room will open up completely. Friends who are trapped—don’t blindly add more to average down. If there’s a rebound back into the resistance zone around 2.2–2.4, you can reduce positions in batches to lower risk. For those who haven’t entered, don’t rush to bottom-fish. As long as the sell pressure hasn’t been fully digested, all rebounds are traps.
After going through this round of market action, it once again confirms a truth: small-cap coins with tight control are extremely risky. Rises and falls are entirely at the discretion of the main players. Without stable buy support, even the prettiest short-term rebound is very likely just a “bait for longs” trap.
If you’re still confused, feel free to chat as well. I’ll be here—if you want to make progress, I’ll walk forward with you.
From 1,000U to 3 million U, my core secret is just one sentence: first learn how to “not get in blindly”$BTC
In the crypto world, 99.99% of people want to get rich quick, but most lose money the fastest.
I started with 1,000U—not a whale, not a tycoon, just an ordinary retail trader.$ETH
Now my account balance is 3 million U+, and it’s not luck but systematic decision-making.
The key principles are three stages:$LAB
Stage 1: Control your position to practice
Divide 1,000U into 5 parts, with 200U per trade
Set a stop-loss and take-profit on every trade
Don’t chase, don’t bet against the trend—only take opportunities you understand
Stage 2: Add to winners
When your account reaches 50,000U, keep each trade to about 25% of total exposure
Add positions in batches in line with the trend, capturing the “golden middle” of the move
Stage 3: Take profit and lock in funds
When your account breaks 200,000U, lock part of your profits every week
Don’t fear losses—only fear getting too cocky
Steady is the biggest kind of leverage
Most people get liquidated for these reasons:
Wrong position sizing—you can’t control it
No stop-loss set—once you lose, you lose all the way
You’re right about the direction, yet you stubbornly hold
I guided a follower from 800U to 12,000U. The night they withdrew, they were so excited they couldn’t sleep for two hours……
A reminder to survive in crypto:
You can’t go far alone; a single oar won’t carry you across— and a lone sail won’t take you to distant shores!
Without a good circle or reliable insider info, it’s hard to turn things around.
If you’re still confused about your trades, and you truly want to break even, make a comeback, and get back on land, Brother Ge is waiting for you to rejoin the team
Picking coins is just three moves—no more, no use. Do you see the market rise and want to rush in? One rush and you get blown out? I used to be that stupid too. Later I was left with only these few—nothing extra: 1. Start with the gainers list—don’t touch anything that hasn’t gone up. If the money hasn’t been paying attention, there’s no opportunity
2. Don’t watch the K-line—watch the monthly line MACD. Enter on a golden cross, stay out on a dead cross. Don’t bet on a rebound
3. Keep a close eye on the 70-day line—wait for a pullback + increased volume, then I’ll dare to add. If the signal doesn’t come, just wait
4. Break the line, then leave—don’t be reluctant. From profit to loss, you lose in that one “wait” word
5. Take-profit in stages—cut half at 30%, cut half again at 50%. Don’t expect to eat fat in one bite
6. The last one is to save your life—if it breaks below the 70-day line, leave immediately. Don’t fight the trend. Don’t gamble with your life
The simpler crypto is, the easier it is to execute How many of these six can you stick to?
If you’re still confused, you’re welcome to chat too. I’m always here. If you want to improve, I’ll walk with you and move forward together.
After trading for a long time, you’ll realize the hardest part isn’t judging the market—it’s keeping control of yourself.$LAB
Every time I open my account, there are two voices in my head fighting. One says: stay steady, wait for the signal—opportunities come every day. The other says: jump in now, or you’ll miss out—if you place this trade and bet big, you’ll turn things around and be back on top. After so many years, I’m still wrestling with these two voices every day.$ETH
I’ve seen too many people who can talk perfectly during post-trade review, but the moment the market opens, they forget everything. It’s not that they don’t understand. It’s that the beast in their heart—hungry to get back to even, desperate to get rich overnight—is too powerful. It beats you up in the choppy range, makes you get off too early during the main uptrend, and after losses you go all-in in a single shot trying to grab back every loss. You think you’re trading, but actually it’s fighting for you.$BTC
So how do you fix it? My simple, dumb method has three rules. First, before entering, set your stop-loss and take-profit in advance. When it hits, you leave—no watching the chart, no bargaining. Second, after two losing trades in a row, close your computer immediately, go out for a walk, and don’t let emotions snowball. Third, once you make money, withdraw part of it to your bank card right away—keep the floating profit in the account only as long as it doesn’t become fuel for impulse spending.
In the end, the final gate of trading isn’t on the candlestick chart—it’s inside your mind. If you can control yourself, the market can’t do anything to you. If you can’t win the battle inside your heart, then no matter how many techniques you learn, it’s all for nothing.
If you’re still chasing and panicking— or you don’t know how to judge your entry and exit points—come find me in the chat room to talk.
Start with 1000U—never traded a contract once, never pulled an all-nighter watching the chart, and rolled it into 10 million U in two years.
The method is so simple that most people read it and just scroll past—but with it, I really got paid in real money. Don’t misunderstand: I’m not a trading genius, just an ordinary person. The difference is this: I stubbornly stick to a “foolproof” strategy and never let my hands shake.
How to do it? Three steps: 1) Screen coins: coins that surged within 11 days. If they fall for 3 straight days, delete them immediately (this is a signal to move the capital out). 2) Monthly MACD: only do golden crosses, and only the first retest after the golden cross that does not break through. 3) Daily 60-day moving average: when price revisits the area and you see an up-volume candle or a long lower shadow, and only after confirming the main player has returned, then enter with a heavy position.
After entering, I follow only one iron rule: if price breaks the 60-day moving average, I exit. If it stays above, I hold.
Take-profit discipline: when up 30%, cut 1/3; when up 50%, cut another 1/3—keep the remaining “core” position to catch the big move. If it drops, don’t panic: if it returns to the buy zone, you can catch it again.
This “monthly trend selection + daily 60-based risk control” method isn’t hard at all. The only difficulty is one thing—can you execute it with steel will? No fantasies, no shaking, and don’t hold to death.
From 1000U to 1,000,000U in two years—I didn’t rely on cleverness. I relied on being stubborn.
If you’re still chasing pumps and panic-selling, or you don’t know how to judge the entry and exit points, come find me in the chat room to talk.
A thousand bucks in a bull market might not seem like much, but in a bear market it can show you clearly whether someone actually knows how to trade $LAB
Many people say the market is too bad—my account shrinks day by day, and it feels like I can’t make any money at all
But honestly, what makes most people lose money is never the bear market; it’s themselves $ETH
With a thousand yuan in the crypto world, can you turn it into more?
Yes, but the prerequisite is learning how not to die $EVAA
A lot of people come in with small capital, thinking only about doubling, getting rich overnight, and reversing their fate—then once they open high leverage, the market moves slightly and the account is wiped out to zero
It’s not that the market doesn’t give opportunities—it’s that you lock yourself out of the road first
So how should you play?
Split your money into multiple parts, and each time only use a small portion to test
If you’re wrong, you only lose a little—that doesn’t hurt; if you’re right, use the profits to keep rolling
The biggest fear with small capital isn’t making money slowly; it’s dying fast
Trade only the setups you understand—don’t chase hot trends or follow hype calls. Wait for the trend to form, wait for a breakout with volume, and wait for confirmation of signals
When there’s no opportunity, going to cash is also a kind of trading
Take half off the table after you make money
With small capital, first double and get your original principal back; then keep rolling the remaining profit. That way, even if you make mistakes later, you won’t be knocked back to square one
To scale from small capital to a bigger size is never about a single stroke of wealth. It’s about controlling risk again and again and protecting profits again and again
In a bear market, the most important thing isn’t how much you make—it’s how long you stay alive
As long as you still have principal, when the opportunity comes, you’re still on the trading table
No bragging, no empty promises—only sharing practical experience that lets you survive in this space
If you’re still repeatedly losing and starting over, come chat. I’ll teach you to make trading simple #标普500收盘逼近纪录高位
The dumbest way to trade coins is often the most effective, but 90% of people die halfway.$ETH I’ve watched too much in the crypto圈 (coin world). The real people who get liquidated and exit are usually not dumb, and not without brains. It’s just that they’re too impatient, too greedy, and too emotional—so they end up burning themselves out. The most common ways retail investors die are three:$BTC First, when it goes up, they chase. Once the candlestick spikes, FOMO takes over. They rush in and shout, “This wave is going to fly!” What happens? The main player just gives the lightest shake, and you get buried.$LAB The time you should actually buy is when everyone is cursing, at floor prices, panicking and selling. Only those who dare to act then are the ones who finally get the meat. Second, they go all-in and stubbornly hold. They see the direction is right and go All in, thinking “belief” can win. The main player just washes the market a couple times and you get liquidated and carried away. No matter how great the logic is, once you hard-fight with a heavy position, you can’t survive the volatility. Emotion replaces discipline, and sooner or later the market will educate you. Third, when you get emotional, you go all-in. Treat trading like risking your life, and treat price swings like your faith. Even if you guess the direction right, it doesn’t matter. No ammo left to adjust—later big opportunities can only watch others eat the meat. Many people lose money over and over, not because the market is wrong, but because they keep butting heads with the market using emotions. What I’ve learned from stepping into traps over these years is basically a few plain words: the simpler it is, the more effective it is: • Before the high-level consolidation is finished, a new high is very likely coming; if the low-range sideways hasn’t bottomed out, don’t rush to catch the dip. • Don’t乱动 before the breakout/turning point—those who can endure the most can live to the next wave. • During the sideways consolidation and choppy period, don’t act. How many people get ground to death by the back-and-forth noise—losing patience and position sizing. • Buy when the daily candle closes bearish, sell when it closes bullish. Following emotion is far less reliable than letting the chart and rules guide you. • If it drops slowly, rebounds are often weak; if it drops hard, it’s easier to see violent rallies. Don’t just look at the price—look at “how it drops.” • Pyramid-style entry: buy in batches, sell in batches—always keep some ammo. • After big pumps or big dumps, there will be consolidation; after consolidation, there will definitely be a breakout/turn. Don’t act hot-headed at the highs, don’t act impulsively at the lows—wait for signals. The real essence is just two things: simplicity + persistence. The dumbest method (discipline, position control, trading against your emotions) is often what lets you last the longest. If you’re still chasing pumps and panic-selling, or you don’t know how to judge entry and exit points, come to the chat room and talk with me.
$EVAA This trend is really ruthless! I just gave a bit of hope, and then—turns around and it’s a waterfall. People who chased the price up are probably confused again. EVAA’s performance today can be said to have fully played out what “baiting with a rise” looks like. It rebounded steadily up to around 2.6. A lot of people thought the correction had ended and that the second wave of the main rally was coming. But it hadn’t even held its ground before the shorts kicked in—one big bearish candle smashed the price back to around 2.1. In a short time, the drop was nearly 20%, and the chased-in funds were almost all buried.$LAB From the order book, this kind of selloff isn’t a normal pullback—it’s a classic panic spillover driven by sentiment. During the rebound, the trading volume didn’t continue to expand. That suggests the real big money didn’t keep stepping in to carry the momentum—more of it was retail chasing higher prices. Once the main force stops pushing up, both the profit-takers and the late-chasers tend to exit at the same time, and that’s when this waterfall-like move becomes very likely. However, dropping fast doesn’t mean you can bottom-fish immediately. Around 2.10–2.15 there is some support, but if buy-side demand can’t keep up afterward, there’s still a risk of a second leg down. What’s really worth watching is whether price can quickly recover to 2.30 and re-establish itself above the 5-day moving average. Otherwise, any rebound is more like a chance to escape, not the start of a brand-new uptrend.$ETH Never think a coin is “cheap” just because it has fallen a lot. When the main force pushes the price up they make money, and when retail chases higher they end up holding the bag—that’s the most common script in the market. It’s better to wait until the trend turns strong again before getting involved, instead of rushing to guess the bottom. The real pros are never the ones who buy at the very lowest—they’re the ones who profit the most steadily from the safest segment. If you’re still chasing and killing trades, or you don’t know how to judge entry and exit points, come find me in the chat room to talk.
$ETH The turn is coming? In this area, don’t chase wildly—direction is about to emerge! From this chart, Ethereum in the short term has already entered a consolidation and ranging phase. It surged up to around 1812 and then quickly dropped, indicating that sell pressure above 1800 still remains, and the market currently doesn’t have enough buy orders to complete a breakout. After that, price kept bouncing around the 1790 area, with both bulls and bears waiting for a new direction.$LAB At the moment, the 5-day moving average has started to turn downward, and price is trading below the short-term moving averages, suggesting that short-term momentum is slightly bearish. However, the support around 1785-1790 has not yet been broken effectively. As long as this zone holds, there is still a chance for another rebound toward 1798-1805. If there is a volume-backed breakout above 1800 and price holds steady, then the 1812 high could be tested again.$BTC On the other hand, once 1785 is lost, the bears are likely to push further. The first area to watch below is around 1775, and further down is the support around 1760. Based on recent price action, I think this is more like a buildup after an upward move—not a one-way crash. But until there is a breakout, I won’t blindly chase longs. My plan is very simple: look for a breakout above 1800, and a pullback/entry below 1785. As long as the range hasn’t been broken, wait patiently. The people who really make money are never the ones guessing direction—they follow the move after direction is confirmed. If you’re still buying highs and selling lows, or you don’t know how to judge your entry and exit points, come to the chat room and talk with me.
Retail investors trade crypto and lose money— the root isn’t that you can’t understand the market; it’s that you can’t control yourself. Check which of these five common high-frequency mistakes you’ve fallen into.$ETH Chasing pumps and panic-selling dumps As soon as a coin starts rising, you rush in—only to buy at the high point. When it drops, you get scared and cut at the bottom. After you sell, the market rebounds, and you slap your head in regret.$EVAA Why? Because you fear missing out. You see others making money and your mind races—you keep thinking, “If I don’t buy now, it’s gone.” But the truth is: when everyone starts talking about it, the market often has already entered its late stage. Frequent trading$LAB You can’t sit still—you always feel like you need to trade every day. You think if you’re not buying or selling, you’re losing. But the more you trade, the more mistakes you make. Investing is about patience. Most profits come from waiting—not from rushing. Lack of position control, going all-in too easily You like a coin and immediately put your entire position into it. One wrong call, and you get stuck. A mature trader’s position size in any single coin typically won’t exceed 20% of total capital. Leave yourself an exit—it's more important than anything. No stop-loss, stubbornly holding Lose 10% and hope it rebounds. Lose 20% and you’re reluctant to cut. Lose 50% and you pretend it never happened. In the end, a small loss turns into a big one. The standard is simple: If the coin in your hands were cash right now, would you still buy this coin? If you wouldn’t, exit decisively—don’t let pride or hesitation keep you stuck just because you’re already down. Treating luck as skill In a bull market, you make money and think your skills are amazing. In a bear market, you lose and blame the market. You never reflect on whether your own trading decisions were the problem. This mindset is the most harmful—when you win, you add more blindly; when you lose, you refuse to admit mistakes, and in the end you even lose your principal. When you’re profitable, first separate what’s luck and what’s real skill. When you’re losing, don’t rush to blame the market—review your own trades first. The people who survive in this industry aren’t the luckiest. They’re the ones who make the fewest mistakes. If you’re still feeling lost, you’re welcome to talk with me. I’ve been here—whenever you want to improve, I’ll walk forward with you.
When you’re emotionally overheated, your account is gone.$VELVET This is the only truth I learned after mixing in the crypto world for 8 years and getting liquidated again and again. It was only after writing this sentence on my desk that I managed, painfully, to turn 10,000 U into 100,000 U.$ETH It’s not talent, and it’s not insider info. It’s a dirt-simple method—I call it “Five-Knife Slash, Cut the Gambling Urge.” Step 1: Slice off the principal $BTC No matter how much you have, cut it into five parts. For example, 10,000 U gets split into five lots of 2,000 U. Keep only one portion on the exchange; throw the other four into a cold wallet. Want to do impulsive trades? First go find a USB drive. Just that process alone cools you down by half. Step 2: Use spot only Knife one is for spot only—forget about futures. Watch coins in the top 100 by market cap with over 100 million in daily trading volume. Buy when they dip; don’t chase breakouts. Throw in 2,000 U, feel the volatility first, don’t break your mindset—then we can talk about making money. Step 3: Buy the dip to average down After entering, if it drops 10%, add one more lot; if it drops again, add again—maximum three times. This immediately drags your cost line down by a chunk. A rebound of 5% will basically get you back to even. If it drops further, admit you’re wrong—lose at most around 6% and still stay alive. Step 4: Chop off greed As soon as you’re up 10% in floating profit, sell half immediately. If 2,000 U rises to 2,200 U, withdraw 1,000 U of principal plus 100 U of profit; whatever remains is free to run. No matter how it moves afterward, you already have a stable 5% net profit in hand—your mindset becomes unstoppable. Step 5: Let profits roll over Take out that portion and keep combining it into 2,000 U units, looking for the next opportunity. Repeat the cycle: “spot → average down → take profit.” As long as you stick with it, you can roll it a dozen-plus times a year. Doubling isn’t a dream, and in a good market, multiplying by several times isn’t exaggerated. Step 6: Cut off the urge to tinker You’re allowed to check the market only during a fixed time each day, and you can place at most one trade per day. Want to trade more? Fine—go run five kilometers first. Give your dopamine to exercise, not to candlesticks. Step 7: Ironclad rules to remember Don’t chase hotspots. Don’t go all-in. Don’t average down more than three times. Before every trade, write a 20-word reason; if you can’t write it, don’t do it. Each month, withdraw 20% of the principal, convert it into fiat, and make it mandatory to lock in the gains. Remember these five knives, and you’ll find that making money isn’t that hard—the hard part is keeping control of yourself. If you’re still confused, feel free to chat with me. I’ll be here. If you want to improve, I’ll walk forward with you.
How to make money with contract trading? $TAC The most core sentence in trading is: Don’t make small money and don’t lose big money. It sounds easy, but doing it is like walking a tightrope. You invest 20,000 to go long, and when it rises to 21,000 you’re happy to take profit—making 5%. But then it directly runs up to 30,000, and you can only watch as the following 50% belongs to someone else. Then you reflect deeply: Next time I must hold on! $EVAA The second time you still go long with 20,000. It rises to 21,000 and you stubbornly refuse to sell—only to have the market slap you the other way and crash to 19,000. You cut the loss with tears. $LAB Selling too early makes you regret it; holding for too long makes you regret it even more—this is the lifelong cycle for most traders. Is there a perfect method that lets you capture small swings and also ride the full big trend? There isn’t. The essence of trading is trade-offs—you have to choose one side. My own choice is: I’d rather miss some small profits, and put my main effort into catching the big trends. Because what truly enables compounding growth in your account is never those tiny gains of a few points every day, but rather a handful of times when the market really moves big. Even if you earn a lot from small fluctuations, one major drawdown can erase it all. But once you nail a big trend, it can often offset the accumulation from dozens of small trades. Of course, I can’t do it with 100% accuracy either—no one can. What we can do is only to keep shifting the probability toward the correct side: • Less emotion, more discipline; • Less fantasy, more execution; • Less “this time is different,” more “cut the loss when it’s time.” In the end, trading isn’t about who predicts best, but who can consistently lose small amounts and make big money over the long run. Figure out your style, find the set of rules that fits you, then stick to it without wavering—more than anything else.
If you’re still confused, feel free to chat. I’m always here. As long as you want to improve, I’ll go forward with you.
Why can some people turn 500,000 into 3 million, while others’ accounts stay stuck in place forever? $BTC Many people think it’s a difference in skill, but what really creates the gap is execution and position management. $LAB Step one: choose the right trend. $ETH I never touch coins with no momentum; I only focus on assets that have already formed a strong structure. Coins that break key resistance levels, show a significant increase in trading volume, and see continuous capital inflow are often more likely to start a powerful uptrend. Rather than spreading yourself everywhere, it’s better to put your energy into the strongest direction. Step two: add to positions only when you’re making money. When you first enter, start with a small position to test the waters, then gradually increase the position after the direction is confirmed. Never average down when you’re losing; only consider compounding profits when you’re in profit. Many people keep losing more and more because they add to losing positions and reduce positions when they’re profitable, completely reversing the rhythm. Step three: put risk first. At any time, a single coin should never take up your entire position. No matter how promising the market looks, always leave yourself an exit. Set stop-losses in advance for every trade and execute them as planned once the target is reached, leaving no room for emotions. My biggest realization over the years is this: the people who truly make big money are not necessarily the best analysts, but the ones who can control themselves best. There are opportunities in the market every day, but opportunities belong only to those with rules and discipline. In the end, trading is not about who runs fastest, but about who can stay at the table the longest. If you want to grow your account, it has never depended on luck, but on a system that can be executed consistently for the long term. If you’re still chasing pumps and dumping on drops, or don’t know how to judge entry and exit points, come to the chat room and talk with me.