Many people enter the crypto world with the hope of turning their fortunes around, only to be slaughtered by a wave of market fluctuations. The most fatal thing is not misjudging the direction, but being unable to act or stop.



I once mentored a fan who started with 1,500 USD and, in three months, grew his account to 320,000 USD. His account curve was steady beyond words, and the core secret was simple—don’t mess around blindly.

The pitfalls he initially fell into are common: holding seven different coins simultaneously, mixing long and short positions, panicking at every market fluctuation. The more he tried to recover losses, the more he got harvested by the market.

I set a strict rule for him, with just three accounts:

**Life-saving position 50U**—This money must never be touched. No matter how urgent or tempting, it cannot be used. Its only purpose is to withstand black swan events, preventing the account from going to zero.

**Flexible position 500U**—Follow the signals. Every trade has a clear reason; don’t be greedy, take profits when enough.

**Trial-and-error position 500U**—This is for exploring. Stop losses immediately if wrong, never hold on stubbornly.

It sounds simple, but many people find it hard to execute. Especially when the community is discussing a big move in a certain coin every day, the hand unconsciously gets itchy.

The most memorable moment was when the group was arguing loudly about long and short positions, and I silenced everyone. He also wanted to follow the trend and open a position, but I held him back. We watched the 4-hour chart together, waiting for the candlesticks to stabilize above the 5-day moving average and for the MACD golden cross to appear before acting. Waiting is the hardest part, but also the most worthwhile.

Finally, he went all-in with half his funds and gained 2,300 USD. While others were crying over liquidation, we had already taken profits and exited.

His first trade earned him 150 USD, and I told him to withdraw all the principal. From then on, only profits and the flexible account were used to roll over. The benefit of this approach is that psychological pressure is instantly relieved—the worst case is losing the earned money, while the principal is already safely in the wallet.

The thicker the account, the more cautious the operation. It sounds counterintuitive, but the market has taught me this.

My strategy can be summarized in three words: **Stable, Precise, Ruthless**.

Stability in position—this isn’t about emotional steadiness, but about using rules to constrain your hands. 50U stays untouched, 500U is flexible, 500U is for trial-and-error, with clear boundaries.

Precision in signals—no guesswork, only follow trends you can understand. Candlestick patterns speak, indicators speak, everything else is noise.

Ruthlessness in taking profits—many people cut losses when they lose, but hesitate to exit when they profit. Doing the opposite—taking profits when enough—makes more sense than fantasizing about getting rich overnight.

Rebalancing the position is just a side effect of the process. The real winners are those who can survive long-term in the market. The market never lacks opportunities; what’s lacking is the people who can stay alive until those opportunities come.

Small funds can’t afford to lose, nor can they afford that mindset. Don’t treat the market like a casino.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • 9
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
0/400
ForkThisDAOvip
· 01-11 04:27
Damn, this three-part method really hits the mark. It's easiest to mess up when you're itching to trade, really. Not messing around is a brilliant phrase, it describes me perfectly. The 50U safety deposit is a killer move; your mindset instantly changes. Waiting truly is the hardest part; I can't help but want to join in when everyone in the group is bragging every day. Make enough profit and then leave; it's easy to say but extremely difficult to do. The thicker the account, the more cautious I need to be; I need to think this through carefully. Reluctant to take profits, quick to cut losses—maybe that's the real way to succeed? Only those who live to see the opportunity are the winners—this one is a gem.
View OriginalReply0
CoffeeOnChainvip
· 01-11 04:02
50U safety margin is really amazing. Many people got liquidated because they couldn't hold this line. To be honest, taking profits is even harder to execute than stop-loss. Greed is something that can't be controlled. I need to try this three-position method; I feel it can cure my itching hands.
View OriginalReply0
SudoRm-RfWallet/vip
· 01-08 18:10
Wait a minute, I've been using this three-part account method for a long time, but I divide it like this: the survival position is firmly held, the tactical position follows signals, and the trial-and-error position is purely out of defiance. The most heartbreaking thing is the phrase "live until the opportunity comes," how many people have died waiting.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-e51e87c7vip
· 01-08 04:59
Sounds good, but to be honest, most people can't do it, including me haha
View OriginalReply0
ETH_Maxi_Taxivip
· 01-08 04:56
To be honest, I've been using this three-position method for a while now, and the key is whether I can resist the urge to act. My biggest lesson is that I originally had a 50U safety position that I stubbornly lost, and now I always force myself to withdraw profits, which really works.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeCriervip
· 01-08 04:55
It sounds like just a story, but I still agree with that 50U safety deposit.
View OriginalReply0
YieldWhisperervip
· 01-08 04:54
nah this "32x in 3 months" math doesn't actually check out if we trace the wallet movements
Reply0
PonziDetectorvip
· 01-08 04:52
Sounds good, but 99% of people will still FOMO in the group and get liquidated.
View OriginalReply0
WalletManagervip
· 01-08 04:42
That's right, I've seen too many people go all-in and get liquidated. The key is really that mindset; greed can disappear in a second. Withdrawing the principal is something I support, as it can really reduce psychological pressure. Otherwise, constantly watching the market keeps you on edge. But on the other hand, small accounts are also easily wiped out by slippage even with rules, so you need to choose a good exchange. The worst case is those who even bring their living expenses into trading; no matter how stable the strategy, it can't save them. The hardest part is to walk away after making enough. I've seen too many people make a profit and then want to earn more, only to lose everything back.
View OriginalReply0
View More
  • Pin

Trade Crypto Anywhere Anytime
qrCode
Scan to download Gate App
Community
  • 简体中文
  • English
  • Tiếng Việt
  • 繁體中文
  • Español
  • Русский
  • Français (Afrique)
  • Português (Portugal)
  • Bahasa Indonesia
  • 日本語
  • بالعربية
  • Українська
  • Português (Brasil)