Three liquidation events, leaving only $1800 in the account. At that moment, I truly understood that the essence of speculative trading is to achieve the maximum return with the minimal cost — this is the full meaning of "betting small to win big."
I wrote this sentence on a sticky note and placed it directly in front of my computer screen. I read it aloud every morning, and review it again at night. Before placing an order, I must ask myself three questions: Is the logic truly about betting small to win big? Is the stop-loss range minimized as much as possible? Is the potential profit space large enough?
Looking back at previous intraday trades, the problems are obvious. Making a small profit and then exiting, frequent entries and exits, with most of the gains eaten up by fees. A single stop-loss loss often equals the profit of ten small wins. This trading approach itself is flawed.
Later, I changed my trading framework. Intraday trades must target at least a week's profit potential; if I’m not confident, I don’t trade. Swing trading is more aggressive, only capturing those trends that can yield profits over several months or even half a year.
Last year, I participated in ETH’s rise from 1200 to 4000. I set a $100 stop-loss at entry, then gradually moved the stop-loss up to the cost basis according to the market. In the end, this trade earned $23,000, turning a small account into more than ten times its original size.
Long-term holdings are even simpler and more straightforward — holding with the idea of "winning for years on a single trade." No need to watch K-lines every day, just waiting for those big market moves that can change your fate.
Now I no longer chase tiny profits. Because I’ve learned a principle: whether trading makes money or not is never determined by the number of trades, but by the risk-reward ratio.
Betting the smallest cost for the most substantial gains — this is the true path for small funds to grow big in the crypto market. The cost of exploration is too high; every pitfall is stepped into, and the account would have been gone long ago.
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DaoTherapy
· 18h ago
It took three liquidations to understand this theory, and the cost was not small. But to be honest, this framework still relies more on luck. ETH's surge indeed made a profit, but what can be reviewed are all survivor bias.
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Blockchainiac
· 18h ago
Three liquidation events to realize the truth, truly a lesson bought with real money, a bit harsh.
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ProposalDetective
· 18h ago
Wait, did I only realize this after three liquidation events? I feel like I lost again after going past 1800U...
Three liquidation events, leaving only $1800 in the account. At that moment, I truly understood that the essence of speculative trading is to achieve the maximum return with the minimal cost — this is the full meaning of "betting small to win big."
I wrote this sentence on a sticky note and placed it directly in front of my computer screen. I read it aloud every morning, and review it again at night. Before placing an order, I must ask myself three questions: Is the logic truly about betting small to win big? Is the stop-loss range minimized as much as possible? Is the potential profit space large enough?
Looking back at previous intraday trades, the problems are obvious. Making a small profit and then exiting, frequent entries and exits, with most of the gains eaten up by fees. A single stop-loss loss often equals the profit of ten small wins. This trading approach itself is flawed.
Later, I changed my trading framework. Intraday trades must target at least a week's profit potential; if I’m not confident, I don’t trade. Swing trading is more aggressive, only capturing those trends that can yield profits over several months or even half a year.
Last year, I participated in ETH’s rise from 1200 to 4000. I set a $100 stop-loss at entry, then gradually moved the stop-loss up to the cost basis according to the market. In the end, this trade earned $23,000, turning a small account into more than ten times its original size.
Long-term holdings are even simpler and more straightforward — holding with the idea of "winning for years on a single trade." No need to watch K-lines every day, just waiting for those big market moves that can change your fate.
Now I no longer chase tiny profits. Because I’ve learned a principle: whether trading makes money or not is never determined by the number of trades, but by the risk-reward ratio.
Betting the smallest cost for the most substantial gains — this is the true path for small funds to grow big in the crypto market. The cost of exploration is too high; every pitfall is stepped into, and the account would have been gone long ago.