Why are contracts so attractive? Simply put, leverage amplifies the potential gains. Ordinary investors can experience returns of dozens or even hundreds of times in a short period, with very low participation thresholds. This is different from lotteries—most people never win the jackpot in their lifetime, but contract participants can always feel the chance of getting rich quickly. That’s the magic.
But this is also the trap. The other side of gains is risk. If you don’t know how to protect your hard-earned wealth, the final outcome of contract trading can only be one word: liquidation.
I’ve learned many lessons from my own failures. First, reduce trading frequency. Frequent trading is like buying lottery tickets often; the odds become less favorable to you. Second, only follow the trend. Don’t gamble on short-term surges or crashes—that’s just gambling on luck. Real opportunities come from riding the trend after it’s established—seeing the direction clearly, following the trend to place orders, which is much more reliable than trying to catch the top or bottom.
Another key point: don’t hold too many different assets in a single position. Focusing your efforts is better than spreading risk under the guise of diversification. Trading isn’t just about buying and selling; it’s more about psychological resilience and risk management.
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MetaMaskVictim
· 4h ago
Well said, but most people will still continue to trade frequently after reading, and I am an example myself.
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LongTermDreamer
· 4h ago
To be honest, three years ago I thought the same way, believing I could turn things around with contracts. But what happened? The lesson learned from that liquidation was more valuable than anything else. Now I just follow the trend and take it slow.
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MidnightMEVeater
· 4h ago
Good morning, it's 3 a.m. again, reading these "lesson articles," which are basically armchair analyses after the fact. Frequent trading = frequently sending money to the robot paradise, this is something you can feel without needing to learn a lesson. The real question is—how many people can withstand that first tenfold thrill?
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LightningWallet
· 4h ago
To be honest, I've heard this theory many times, but very few people can actually do it.
I have a deep understanding of frequent trading; the cost of being reckless is directly getting liquidated.
Only following the trend sounds simple, but executing it is a nightmare, and the psychological hurdle is the hardest to overcome.
The suggestion to concentrate firepower is good, but it depends on whether the trader's willpower is strong enough.
In the end, it's still that old saying: contracts for quick money can also quickly go to zero.
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GateUser-c799715c
· 5h ago
That's so true, I'm the kind of person who dies from frequent trading.
Why are contracts so attractive? Simply put, leverage amplifies the potential gains. Ordinary investors can experience returns of dozens or even hundreds of times in a short period, with very low participation thresholds. This is different from lotteries—most people never win the jackpot in their lifetime, but contract participants can always feel the chance of getting rich quickly. That’s the magic.
But this is also the trap. The other side of gains is risk. If you don’t know how to protect your hard-earned wealth, the final outcome of contract trading can only be one word: liquidation.
I’ve learned many lessons from my own failures. First, reduce trading frequency. Frequent trading is like buying lottery tickets often; the odds become less favorable to you. Second, only follow the trend. Don’t gamble on short-term surges or crashes—that’s just gambling on luck. Real opportunities come from riding the trend after it’s established—seeing the direction clearly, following the trend to place orders, which is much more reliable than trying to catch the top or bottom.
Another key point: don’t hold too many different assets in a single position. Focusing your efforts is better than spreading risk under the guise of diversification. Trading isn’t just about buying and selling; it’s more about psychological resilience and risk management.