Once a fan approached me, his account only had 3000U left. He chuckled bitterly as he recounted this blood-and-tears story—over twenty thousand in principal, nearly wiped out after a series of reckless operations. Chasing gains, cutting losses, leverage liquidations, missing out on FOMO—he had jumped into all these pits. My advice to him was straightforward: "Change your approach."
I didn't give any profound theories, just a set of hard rules: no single position exceeding 30% of total funds; take profits at 10% to 15%; cut losses immediately if they exceed 4%; avoid trading unclear trends altogether. When he first started implementing these, he felt pretty awkward, reviewing his trades every day. After three months, he messaged me saying his account grew from 3000U to nearly 40,000U. His words were: "It's really not luck, discipline brought me back."
**Position sizing determines life or death**
I have one strict rule: no single position should exceed 30% of total funds. Sounds conservative? But it's not about maximizing profits; it's about staying alive.
The data is sobering—90% of liquidation cases stem from poor risk management. No matter how correct your market direction judgment is, if your position is too heavy, a small fluctuation can wipe you out.
My approach is to split the money into three parts: 10% for aggressive trading to test the waters; 20% for dollar-cost averaging into mainstream coins for long-term holding; and the remaining 70% parked in low-risk, stable financial products. Even if the aggressive position loses everything, the account won't be wiped out.
**Take profit and cut losses are psychological games**
Taking profits at 10%-15% is the hardest part. Human nature always wants to greed a little more, but often that results in giving back what was gained. Cutting losses within 4% is also difficult; there's always a feeling that it might rebound.
In fact, these are all psychological barriers. Truly long-lasting traders never gamble against the market.
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DAOdreamer
· 01-11 02:33
Wow, 3000U to 40,000? Discipline really isn't just talk.
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GasFeeNightmare
· 01-10 17:02
3000U to 40,000? This guy is really disciplined to the core
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It's easy to say but hard to do. I'm the kind of person who wants to try again after earning just 5%
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Position management is spot on, but I feel most people simply can't follow through
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What can I say, discipline is worth more than anything, but damn, it's so hard to stick to
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Earning interest by lying down 70%, I feel like this makes more money than any trading strategy
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I've always struggled with stop-loss, always waiting for a rebound, but ended up getting caught multiple times
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That's right, but I still can't change. Greed is a hard habit to break
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If only this set of rules could be executed well, it would be hard not to make money
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ImpermanentPhilosopher
· 01-09 12:34
From 3,000 to 40,000, purely relying on discipline? I believe it, really, but I still want to take a gamble haha
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MEVSandwichVictim
· 01-08 04:57
That's so true, discipline is life itself.
Greed has betrayed me many times, now I've learned to be smarter.
Turning 3,000 into 40,000 is an inspiring story, but the key is really whether you can stick with it.
Position management is indeed a matter of survival, not just making money.
Taking profits and cutting losses sounds simple, but it's truly deadly in practice. Every time, I want to be a little greedier.
The root of 90% of margin calls is just like this—having the right direction doesn't help if you can't stick to it.
Why is it so difficult? Human nature makes this hurdle too hard to overcome.
A fixed investment + aggressive trading setup is indeed stable; I've learned that.
This set of rules sounds conservative, but it really helps you survive longer.
Cutting at a 4% loss is easy to say but a psychological battle to actually do.
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MoonRocketman
· 01-08 04:57
Position management is about calculating escape velocity. If you don't understand this, you'll eventually be pulled down by gravity.
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The 30% position cap strategy is actually a real-world version of the Bollinger Bands channel. The root cause of 90% liquidation is written so painfully.
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Knowing when to stop at 10%-15% is the hardest to execute. Human greed is like spilled fuel; a moment of carelessness can blow up the cabin.
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Rolling from 3,000U to 40,000U is not surprising. The key is that he found the launch window... No, he found discipline, the stabilizer.
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Cut immediately at a 4% stop-loss. It sounds simple, but it requires mental toughness a hundred times more than predicting market trends.
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Lying in stable financial management at 70% is brilliant, like installing a parachute on your account—you can't die no matter how much you tinker.
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The real technical indicators are not RSI or MACD, but whether you can follow the rules. That’s the highest-level coefficient of perspective.
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down_only_larry
· 01-08 04:51
3000U multiplied by 13 times, this guy really understood it now
View OriginalReply0
LuckyBearDrawer
· 01-08 04:44
Positioning really hits a bottleneck; greed once and it's gone.
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PumpStrategist
· 01-08 04:29
I read through it, and it's actually just old news. The root cause of 90% of liquidations is indeed position management, but the problem is how many people can really stick to discipline? As for the guy who went from 3k to 40k, I’d like to see if he's still around after 6 months.
Discipline is the real life-saving straw.
Once a fan approached me, his account only had 3000U left. He chuckled bitterly as he recounted this blood-and-tears story—over twenty thousand in principal, nearly wiped out after a series of reckless operations. Chasing gains, cutting losses, leverage liquidations, missing out on FOMO—he had jumped into all these pits. My advice to him was straightforward: "Change your approach."
I didn't give any profound theories, just a set of hard rules: no single position exceeding 30% of total funds; take profits at 10% to 15%; cut losses immediately if they exceed 4%; avoid trading unclear trends altogether. When he first started implementing these, he felt pretty awkward, reviewing his trades every day. After three months, he messaged me saying his account grew from 3000U to nearly 40,000U. His words were: "It's really not luck, discipline brought me back."
**Position sizing determines life or death**
I have one strict rule: no single position should exceed 30% of total funds. Sounds conservative? But it's not about maximizing profits; it's about staying alive.
The data is sobering—90% of liquidation cases stem from poor risk management. No matter how correct your market direction judgment is, if your position is too heavy, a small fluctuation can wipe you out.
My approach is to split the money into three parts: 10% for aggressive trading to test the waters; 20% for dollar-cost averaging into mainstream coins for long-term holding; and the remaining 70% parked in low-risk, stable financial products. Even if the aggressive position loses everything, the account won't be wiped out.
**Take profit and cut losses are psychological games**
Taking profits at 10%-15% is the hardest part. Human nature always wants to greed a little more, but often that results in giving back what was gained. Cutting losses within 4% is also difficult; there's always a feeling that it might rebound.
In fact, these are all psychological barriers. Truly long-lasting traders never gamble against the market.