Treating the exchange as an ATM sounds like a fairy tale. But if you have a system, you might get close to that goal.
I spent 8 years growing from $5,000 to seven-figure funds, all while avoiding liquidation. This is not luck hitting me, but each operation following a set of strategies repeatedly validated by the market.
**First Trick: Profit is not for preservation, but for division**
Many people's problem is—they want to keep earning once they make money. This mindset distorts judgment.
My approach is: whenever a position gains 10%, immediately execute "profit division." Half of the profit is directly withdrawn to a cold wallet for locking, and the other half remains in the account to continue participating in the market. What's the benefit? If the market continues upward, you can still earn; if it turns downward, you've already locked in part of the gains. Over eight years, I have executed this more than 30 times, with the highest weekly withdrawal reaching USD.
Principal always comes first. Only when the principal is alive can the story of compound interest continue.
**Second Trick: The most common liquidation points are exactly where I start my layout**
There's a market phenomenon—most liquidations happen at trend reversal points. I turn this rule around.
Use three timeframes to judge: daily for the big trend, 4-hour for defining the trading range, and 15-minute for precise entry timing. For the same coin, I will take two positions simultaneously—A long with the trend, B short at key reversal points. The risk for each position is strictly controlled within 1.5% of total funds.
This way, in a ranging market, I can eat the volatility; in a trending market, I can firmly hold the main direction. During the LUNA crash, my dual positions triggered take profit simultaneously, and the account grew by 40% that day.
**Third Trick: A 40% win rate still makes money, relying on the art of stop-loss**
Many misunderstand stop-loss, thinking it’s a failure. Actually, stop-loss is a necessary cost to stay at the table.
My system’s win rate is only 40%, which sounds low. But the key is a risk-reward ratio of 4:1—making more when winning, losing less when losing. This way, the long-term expected value remains positive. Combining these two logics allows the account to grow steadily.
The specific operational rules are hardcore: - Divide total funds into 10 parts, at most 3 parts used at the same time - If two consecutive losses occur, immediately stop trading to prevent revenge trading - After doubling the account, forcibly withdraw 20% of profits to allocate to more stable assets
The market doesn’t fear your losses; it fears you blowing up your account all at once. As long as you’re still at the table, time will gradually tilt in your favor. Truly skilled traders are not those who seize the most opportunities, but those who understand risk control best.
The market is always there; the key is how long you can survive.
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Treating the exchange as an ATM sounds like a fairy tale. But if you have a system, you might get close to that goal.
I spent 8 years growing from $5,000 to seven-figure funds, all while avoiding liquidation. This is not luck hitting me, but each operation following a set of strategies repeatedly validated by the market.
**First Trick: Profit is not for preservation, but for division**
Many people's problem is—they want to keep earning once they make money. This mindset distorts judgment.
My approach is: whenever a position gains 10%, immediately execute "profit division." Half of the profit is directly withdrawn to a cold wallet for locking, and the other half remains in the account to continue participating in the market. What's the benefit? If the market continues upward, you can still earn; if it turns downward, you've already locked in part of the gains. Over eight years, I have executed this more than 30 times, with the highest weekly withdrawal reaching USD.
Principal always comes first. Only when the principal is alive can the story of compound interest continue.
**Second Trick: The most common liquidation points are exactly where I start my layout**
There's a market phenomenon—most liquidations happen at trend reversal points. I turn this rule around.
Use three timeframes to judge: daily for the big trend, 4-hour for defining the trading range, and 15-minute for precise entry timing. For the same coin, I will take two positions simultaneously—A long with the trend, B short at key reversal points. The risk for each position is strictly controlled within 1.5% of total funds.
This way, in a ranging market, I can eat the volatility; in a trending market, I can firmly hold the main direction. During the LUNA crash, my dual positions triggered take profit simultaneously, and the account grew by 40% that day.
**Third Trick: A 40% win rate still makes money, relying on the art of stop-loss**
Many misunderstand stop-loss, thinking it’s a failure. Actually, stop-loss is a necessary cost to stay at the table.
My system’s win rate is only 40%, which sounds low. But the key is a risk-reward ratio of 4:1—making more when winning, losing less when losing. This way, the long-term expected value remains positive. Combining these two logics allows the account to grow steadily.
The specific operational rules are hardcore:
- Divide total funds into 10 parts, at most 3 parts used at the same time
- If two consecutive losses occur, immediately stop trading to prevent revenge trading
- After doubling the account, forcibly withdraw 20% of profits to allocate to more stable assets
The market doesn’t fear your losses; it fears you blowing up your account all at once. As long as you’re still at the table, time will gradually tilt in your favor. Truly skilled traders are not those who seize the most opportunities, but those who understand risk control best.
The market is always there; the key is how long you can survive.