#美国贸易赤字状况 $BULLA's logic of rolling from 1200u to 37,000u is actually very simple—it's not luck, it's method.
I've tested similar strategies with small accounts, backtested with $ALCH, and saw results within a month. The key is not copying divine signals, but having a reproducible rolling system.
My three core principles:
**First, choose volatile coins.** I only look at assets with a 24-hour price change exceeding 15%. Markets with no movement are skipped directly. Without volatility, there's no room for rolling, this is a prerequisite.
**Second, leverage must be controlled.** Use only 3x, never full position. If the account has 1000U, open a 3000U position. The key is to leave yourself room to breathe each time, avoiding risking your entire capital. Staying alive is the foundation for continuous rolling.
**Third, a take-profit system is more important than opening positions.** Take half profits at 15%, lock in gains, and let the remaining position run with a 5% trailing stop. Follow the rules throughout, not relying on gut feeling.
**Why do most people end up losing when rolling?**
One reason is forcing trades in a choppy market, getting worn out by repeated stop-losses. I add a 4-hour EMA12/26 filter; if there's no signal, I do nothing.
Another reason is opening too much leverage, seeking excitement without regard for survival. I tested myself: the survival probability with 25x leverage is over three times higher than with 50x. If you want stable rolling, don't rush to high leverage.
Real example: In mid-April, $LPT broke out with high volume and met volatility standards. I went long with the trend, with a position of about 12,000U (three times my principal). I took half profits after a rally, then later triggered a trailing stop to exit, earning nearly 80% on that trade.
This strategy has a high success rate in trending markets, but in choppy markets, it can take hits. Therefore, signal filtering must be in place.
Rolling is never a mystical art; it's not about who has bigger guts, but about who can consistently follow their rules from start to finish. Only with stability can you roll for the long term.
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SignatureCollector
· 01-10 08:10
Honestly, this set of things sounds a bit frighteningly standard, just worried it will turn out to be a post-hoc analysis...
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ColdWalletGuardian
· 01-10 08:10
3x leverage is really stable, just worried about trembling and reversing
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That's right, most people die from greed, there's really no need to gamble with 25x and 50x
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I have deep experience with volatile markets; if signals are not properly filtered, you get worn out directly
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Taking profit at 15% and selling half is a brilliant move, at least it ensures a way out
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The key is still execution; everyone understands the rules, but few can truly follow them from start to finish
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How did that $LPT order achieve an 80% profit? Did it encounter a particularly good market window?
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Only act when volatility exceeds 15%, this filtering criterion can indeed eliminate a lot of junk oscillations
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CommunityLurker
· 01-10 08:00
3x leverage indeed lasts longer, but the volatility isn't enough to create any real opportunities, it's just a chicken rib.
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BearWhisperGod
· 01-10 07:50
Taking profit is more important than opening a position. That hit me hard; I previously lost because I had no rules.
#美国贸易赤字状况 $BULLA's logic of rolling from 1200u to 37,000u is actually very simple—it's not luck, it's method.
I've tested similar strategies with small accounts, backtested with $ALCH, and saw results within a month. The key is not copying divine signals, but having a reproducible rolling system.
My three core principles:
**First, choose volatile coins.** I only look at assets with a 24-hour price change exceeding 15%. Markets with no movement are skipped directly. Without volatility, there's no room for rolling, this is a prerequisite.
**Second, leverage must be controlled.** Use only 3x, never full position. If the account has 1000U, open a 3000U position. The key is to leave yourself room to breathe each time, avoiding risking your entire capital. Staying alive is the foundation for continuous rolling.
**Third, a take-profit system is more important than opening positions.** Take half profits at 15%, lock in gains, and let the remaining position run with a 5% trailing stop. Follow the rules throughout, not relying on gut feeling.
**Why do most people end up losing when rolling?**
One reason is forcing trades in a choppy market, getting worn out by repeated stop-losses. I add a 4-hour EMA12/26 filter; if there's no signal, I do nothing.
Another reason is opening too much leverage, seeking excitement without regard for survival. I tested myself: the survival probability with 25x leverage is over three times higher than with 50x. If you want stable rolling, don't rush to high leverage.
Real example: In mid-April, $LPT broke out with high volume and met volatility standards. I went long with the trend, with a position of about 12,000U (three times my principal). I took half profits after a rally, then later triggered a trailing stop to exit, earning nearly 80% on that trade.
This strategy has a high success rate in trending markets, but in choppy markets, it can take hits. Therefore, signal filtering must be in place.
Rolling is never a mystical art; it's not about who has bigger guts, but about who can consistently follow their rules from start to finish. Only with stability can you roll for the long term.