Careless hands, and you can't hold onto your money.
I still remember when I first entered the crypto world. Like most newcomers, I spent every day studying candlestick charts, analyzing indicators, and researching trends, eager to package myself as a Wall Street trader. And what happened? One liquidation after another, to the point of doubting life itself. Only later did I realize that in this market, the clever often fall into traps set by their own cleverness. The methods that seem "stupid" are often the ones that make the most money.
I tested a trading system myself, starting with 10,000 USDT, and in less than two months, it grew to 200,000. Honestly, this method is ridiculously simple—just three core rules. The lessons learned from real money are all laid out here today.
**Rule One: Position Size Ceiling**
Always remember—any single trade should never exceed 5% of your total capital. This is a lifeline.
Why do so many people lose money? Usually, it's not because they misjudge the direction, but because they go all-in with full position sizing. Imagine you only have 10,000 capital, and you put it all in at once. If your judgment is wrong, it's deadly. But if you only risk 5%, that’s just 500 bucks, and even if you lose, it’s only 2-3%, leaving plenty of room to recover.
My approach is even more conservative. I divide my funds into three separate pools:
**Short-term Pool:** Dedicated to small intraday opportunities. At most, I take one shot per day. If the market isn’t favorable, I rest instead of shooting blindly. This helps maintain a feel for the market and catch sudden opportunities.
**Main Trend Pool:** This is the main portion. I wait for a true weekly trend to emerge, which might only happen once a week, but when it does, I aim for precise entries. The goal is that one-hit kill feeling.
**Insurance Pool:** This is my bottom line. No matter how the market moves, I refuse to touch this portion. Even if all other positions are wiped out, this pool can help me bounce back.
There are firewalls between these pools—they do not support each other. If you lose in your short-term trades, never use your insurance pool to cover the losses. The benefit of this approach is that you never fall into despair; you stay alive long enough, and eventually, you will be the winner.
In this market, simply surviving longer than others already means you’ve won over 90%.
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VitaliksTwin
· 01-08 06:50
Unsteady hands are real, but I think more people are mentally unstable... I've been using the 5% position strategy for a long time, but the key is to stick to discipline.
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4am_degen
· 01-08 06:46
This insurance pool is really solid; I'm just worried I'll be tempted to mess with it myself.
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IronHeadMiner
· 01-08 06:26
It's the same 5% position theory again, I've heard it a hundred times... but there are indeed people who turn their fortunes around with this, and I just can't believe it.
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PumpDoctrine
· 01-08 06:21
You're absolutely right. Steady hands are the primary productivity. So many people have lost everything by going all-in on one shot, really.
Careless hands, and you can't hold onto your money.
I still remember when I first entered the crypto world. Like most newcomers, I spent every day studying candlestick charts, analyzing indicators, and researching trends, eager to package myself as a Wall Street trader. And what happened? One liquidation after another, to the point of doubting life itself. Only later did I realize that in this market, the clever often fall into traps set by their own cleverness. The methods that seem "stupid" are often the ones that make the most money.
I tested a trading system myself, starting with 10,000 USDT, and in less than two months, it grew to 200,000. Honestly, this method is ridiculously simple—just three core rules. The lessons learned from real money are all laid out here today.
**Rule One: Position Size Ceiling**
Always remember—any single trade should never exceed 5% of your total capital. This is a lifeline.
Why do so many people lose money? Usually, it's not because they misjudge the direction, but because they go all-in with full position sizing. Imagine you only have 10,000 capital, and you put it all in at once. If your judgment is wrong, it's deadly. But if you only risk 5%, that’s just 500 bucks, and even if you lose, it’s only 2-3%, leaving plenty of room to recover.
My approach is even more conservative. I divide my funds into three separate pools:
**Short-term Pool:** Dedicated to small intraday opportunities. At most, I take one shot per day. If the market isn’t favorable, I rest instead of shooting blindly. This helps maintain a feel for the market and catch sudden opportunities.
**Main Trend Pool:** This is the main portion. I wait for a true weekly trend to emerge, which might only happen once a week, but when it does, I aim for precise entries. The goal is that one-hit kill feeling.
**Insurance Pool:** This is my bottom line. No matter how the market moves, I refuse to touch this portion. Even if all other positions are wiped out, this pool can help me bounce back.
There are firewalls between these pools—they do not support each other. If you lose in your short-term trades, never use your insurance pool to cover the losses. The benefit of this approach is that you never fall into despair; you stay alive long enough, and eventually, you will be the winner.
In this market, simply surviving longer than others already means you’ve won over 90%.