Many traders' daily routine is like this - guessing rises and falls, staring at the exchange's Order Book, pondering market sentiment, and in the end, most still lose money. I chose a completely different path.
Instead of predicting market trends, it's better to design the probability structure of trades. Over the past 5 years, I haven't had a liquidation, and my principal has grown from 3000U to an 8-digit figure. To put it simply, it's not based on insider information or so-called magical indicators, but rather a complete position management logic — simply put, it's about thinking from the perspective of the casino owner.
Why does the casino owner make stable profits? Because he controls risk, takes probabilities, and does not bet on single outcomes. Trading is based on the same principle.
The core actually boils down to three points: first, how to design the risk exposure of each trade; second, how to balance between multiple positions; third, how to make time and compound interest work for you. The details are not complicated, but the execution tests your mindset and discipline.
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ser_ngmi
· 4h ago
Sounds impressive, but how many people can actually execute this? Most still fall short in their mindset.
Rolling 3000U into an eight-digit number is indeed tough, but such stories are told every day. The key is, can you review your trading records?
The casino owner's thinking is not wrong, but when will retail investors truly accept the "no gambling" setting? Right now, there are still a bunch of people all in.
What you said is correct, but it doesn't introduce anything new. Risk Management has long been a common concept.
This logic seems right at first glance, but the difficulty of execution is severely underestimated, especially during market fluctuations.
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MrRightClick
· 4h ago
Tsk, it's that same "I succeeded" narrative again, but this time it sounds quite clear-headed, no hype about indicators or luck.
The casino boss mentality is indeed brilliant; most people just die on single wins and losses and never think about probabilities.
Rolling three thousand U into eight figures... sounds great, but are there really that many people who can execute it? Discipline is too torturous.
Position management sounds simple, but doing it is another matter; it's easy to talk about, hard to do.
I've known this logic for a long time, the problem is that for the vast majority, there's a universe between knowing and doing.
Forget it, I'll just keep watching my own Candlestick, anyway, probabilities may not necessarily be useful for me.
Not getting liquidated for five years is indeed strong, much more reliable than those I know who advocate every day.
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DoomCanister
· 4h ago
I've heard the saying about the mindset of a casino owner too many times; the key is, how many people can actually do it? Talking about mentality and discipline is easy.
However, rolling from 3000U to 8 figures is indeed quite impressive, provided that there haven't been any extreme market crashes in the past five years.
When will you teach me how to avoid getting liquidated? Right now, I'm the kind of person who stares at the screen until I go blind.
The metaphor of a casino owner eating probabilities is really spot on; it's much more reliable than those who brag about buying the dip and escaping at the top every day.
Position management is very important, but 99% of people still can't shake off the habit of going full position.
The moment you stop guessing the rise and fall, the account truly comes to life; I believe in that.
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MergeConflict
· 5h ago
Relying on 3000U to roll into an 8-digit number? I've heard this story too many times, and very few actually make it to say this.
Sounds nice, the mindset of a casino owner... The problem is that most people can't control their greed at all.
The probability structure sounds good, but in reality, 99% of people can't execute it; the mindset is much harder than the strategy.
Many traders' daily routine is like this - guessing rises and falls, staring at the exchange's Order Book, pondering market sentiment, and in the end, most still lose money. I chose a completely different path.
Instead of predicting market trends, it's better to design the probability structure of trades. Over the past 5 years, I haven't had a liquidation, and my principal has grown from 3000U to an 8-digit figure. To put it simply, it's not based on insider information or so-called magical indicators, but rather a complete position management logic — simply put, it's about thinking from the perspective of the casino owner.
Why does the casino owner make stable profits? Because he controls risk, takes probabilities, and does not bet on single outcomes. Trading is based on the same principle.
The core actually boils down to three points: first, how to design the risk exposure of each trade; second, how to balance between multiple positions; third, how to make time and compound interest work for you. The details are not complicated, but the execution tests your mindset and discipline.