Some time ago, someone asked me what to do after getting trapped in CLOs, especially under high fee conditions, which is really frustrating. I want to share a relatively conservative approach, and I welcome everyone to discuss.



If you really get caught, my method is as follows: first, place a short order at the lowest point on the 15-minute chart, then use a 10:1 position ratio to go long. If it drops, keep placing orders, gradually filling the position. What are the benefits of this? Once the returns from the long position exceed the four-hour fee, you can safely exit.

Many people are afraid that high fees will cause long positions to continue losing, but there's no need to worry too much. As long as you manage your positions and control risks well, you can usually find opportunities to get out. The key is to have patience and discipline, and not to make reckless moves out of anxiety.
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CryptoCross-TalkClubvip
· 7h ago
Laughing to death, this move is basically buying more as it drops, betting the blood and sweat of the little guys on a rebound. If it doesn’t go up, you’re permanently trapped. --- High fees on long positions and still adding more? Isn’t that throwing gasoline on a fire? --- Filling the position at 10 to 1 is like betting your life. If it rebounds even a little, you’re the chosen one; if it drops a bit, you’re wiped out instantly. --- I just want to ask, if this strategy were so reliable, why aren’t more people kneeling in the crypto world? --- Talking about risk control easily, but the real question is, who can stay calm when caught in a trap? --- It’s truly outrageous that fees eat up profits, basically free-riding on the exchange’s money. --- Having the entire position filled leaves no room to add more. The worst part is, the most painful moment is when it rebounds. --- It sounds good in theory, but once you see the decline, panic sets in—this is the difference between rookies and veterans. --- I just can’t understand, if it’s so stable, why share this strategy at all? --- Wait, isn’t your strategy just averaging down? Old tricks with a new twist.
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MechanicalMartelvip
· 01-09 12:50
High-cost position stacking is indeed uncomfortable, but this approach is a bit aggressive... Fully covering the position might carry significant risk.
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SilentObservervip
· 01-09 12:38
This set has been popular in the crypto circle for a long time, the key is whether you can really hold on. --- Grid trading sounds simple, but the real challenge is maintaining the right mindset during execution. --- High fees are really the worst, losing money and still getting charged transaction fees—this game. --- Position management sounds easy, but in practice, it's deadly to do. Many people lack patience and end up deep in losses. --- Waiting for profits from long positions to surpass the fees? Might as well wait for the Year of the Monkey, haha. --- Fees are just tools for the whales to harvest retail investors; no matter how you do it, you're being played. --- A 10:1 configuration sounds risky; if extreme market conditions hit, it could blow up. --- Patience and discipline? I lack those two, which is why I got caught in the trap. --- Anyway, I don't believe in any exit plans. If you're going to lose, you're going to lose—unless the coin price recovers.
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TokenVelocityTraumavip
· 01-09 12:35
Flattening this set of advice, how many times have I heard it, but the key still depends on whether you can endure that period of psychological torment. High leverage is really a double-edged sword; the account liquidation speed often surpasses the rebound. The fees eaten up by profits feel more painful than stop-loss... Try this logic in a bear market, and your dreams will be shattered. 10:1 leverage sounds easy to use, but who will calculate whether the funds are sufficient? It's all about patience and discipline; easy to say, but how many people can truly stick to it when caught in a position? This CLO trap is easy to enter but hard to exit; don’t just talk about the strategy, my friend.
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HallucinationGrowervip
· 01-09 12:28
To be honest, this set of theories sounds good, but placing a position under high fees is really gambling on a rebound.
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degenonymousvip
· 01-09 12:27
High-fee pump-and-dump schemes, I've seen this trick way too many times --- It's easy to say, but actually executing it often leads to a mental breakdown, right? --- 10 to 1 margin? Bro, are you betting on a rebound or playing Russian roulette? --- Wait, are you saying to keep going long to break even? That logic sounds even more dangerous to me --- Nonsense, high-fee long positions are already in a death spiral, adding more isn't suicide? --- Just want to ask, this move works in a bull market, what do you do in a bear market? --- Haha, another "patience and discipline" problem that can be solved, but my account disagrees --- Still daring to add positions at a high level, this move is really bold --- Your thinking is just trading time for space, but the premise is that the coin can't keep crashing. This gamble is a bit risky
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