After three margin calls and when the account was down to only 1800 yuan, I finally understood one thing: the essence of speculative trading is not about frequent operations, but about using the smallest stop-loss to maximize potential profits.
I wrote this sentence on a sticky note and pasted it right in the center of the screen. I repeat it ten times every morning upon waking, and review and recite it ten times before bed.
Now, before each trade, I always ask myself three questions: Is this trade based on the logic of risking a little to gain a lot? Is the stop-loss set at the lowest possible level? Is the potential profit space large enough?
When I used to do day trading, I always thought about making a little money and then exiting. But the frequent operations ended up costing me a lot in fees. The losses from one stop-loss were even greater than the profits I made over several days. Later, I changed my rules: intraday trades must target at least a week's profit potential. If I’m not confident, I won’t enter.
When it came to swing trading, I became even more ruthless. I only chase opportunities that can yield profits over several months or even half a year. I remember last year when ETH rose from $1200 to $4000. I entered with a $100 stop-loss, moved the stop-loss up to the break-even point along the way, and finally made 23,000 yuan. My small account directly multiplied tenfold.
As for long-term holdings, I adopt the patience of "holding one position for years." I don’t need to watch the screen every day, just waiting for those big market moves that can achieve financial freedom in the second half of life.
Now, I no longer chase tiny profits. Because I’ve realized: the success or failure of trading doesn’t depend on how frequently you operate, but on the risk-reward ratio of each trade. Betting with the smallest cost for the most substantial returns—that’s the only shortcut for small funds to grow big in this market.
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ForkMonger
· 1h ago
ngl three blown accounts just to learn risk management is brutal but honestly? the real play is when you stop chasing volume and start hunting asymmetry. everyone's grinding 100 trades a day while the real money's sitting on one position watching governance vote themselves into irrelevance lmao
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All-InQueen
· 2h ago
Busted three times before I finally understood, honestly, I was too greedy before.
This logic is indeed correct: small stop-losses with large room for profit, but the real challenge is having patience.
Waiting for a month's opportunity is much harder than daily trading...
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HackerWhoCares
· 16h ago
Bailed out three times before I finally understood? I already knew, I just didn't have the money to try and error.
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LightningLady
· 01-07 19:51
It took three liquidations to realize, and the cost is a bit high... But to be honest, the way to minimize stop-loss is truly brilliant; this is how the odds mindset is played.
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BoredApeResistance
· 01-07 19:47
To be honest, I only realized this after being liquidated three times, and the cost was a bit high... But that ETH case was truly amazing. A $100 stop-loss turned into $23,000, which is real risk management. I used to be the kind of trader who operated frequently, and the fees ate up all the profits. I've changed now, sticking to major swings, and I don't even look at small fluctuations.
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CryptoCrazyGF
· 01-07 19:45
It's another story of liquidation leading to enlightenment; listening to it is exhausting. But that ETH example really blew up—stopped out at 100 and skyrocketed to 23,000... The ratio is truly insane.
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TokenSleuth
· 01-07 19:41
Damn, I was also in that ETH wave, but I just didn't have enough bullets... Truly, the risk-reward ratio determines life or death.
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HappyMinerUncle
· 01-07 19:30
Having been liquidated three times before realizing the way, this enlightenment cost me 1800 bucks in tuition fees.
After three margin calls and when the account was down to only 1800 yuan, I finally understood one thing: the essence of speculative trading is not about frequent operations, but about using the smallest stop-loss to maximize potential profits.
I wrote this sentence on a sticky note and pasted it right in the center of the screen. I repeat it ten times every morning upon waking, and review and recite it ten times before bed.
Now, before each trade, I always ask myself three questions: Is this trade based on the logic of risking a little to gain a lot? Is the stop-loss set at the lowest possible level? Is the potential profit space large enough?
When I used to do day trading, I always thought about making a little money and then exiting. But the frequent operations ended up costing me a lot in fees. The losses from one stop-loss were even greater than the profits I made over several days. Later, I changed my rules: intraday trades must target at least a week's profit potential. If I’m not confident, I won’t enter.
When it came to swing trading, I became even more ruthless. I only chase opportunities that can yield profits over several months or even half a year. I remember last year when ETH rose from $1200 to $4000. I entered with a $100 stop-loss, moved the stop-loss up to the break-even point along the way, and finally made 23,000 yuan. My small account directly multiplied tenfold.
As for long-term holdings, I adopt the patience of "holding one position for years." I don’t need to watch the screen every day, just waiting for those big market moves that can achieve financial freedom in the second half of life.
Now, I no longer chase tiny profits. Because I’ve realized: the success or failure of trading doesn’t depend on how frequently you operate, but on the risk-reward ratio of each trade. Betting with the smallest cost for the most substantial returns—that’s the only shortcut for small funds to grow big in this market.