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Having navigated the crypto world for many years, I’ve noticed a phenomenon: many people have been messing around in this market for a year or two, yet their accounts still haven’t reached the million-dollar mark. But is this really the market’s fault? Not necessarily.
I’ve been in this circle for twelve years, gradually accumulating from small funds to the current scale, and I’ve stepped on countless pitfalls along the way. Today, I want to organize and share the insights I’ve gained through real money—this isn’t some advanced tutorial, just some fundamental but often overlooked core understandings.
**About the Operating Logic of Small Accounts**
If you have less than 200,000 in capital, don’t develop the habit of daily trading. In reality, it’s enough to catch one main upward wave throughout the year. The result of frequent full-position trading is continuously paying transaction fees to the exchange, and your account simply can’t grow big.
**Cognition Is the Ceiling of Making Money**
What you practice on a demo account isn’t technical skills, but human nature. This may sound a bit harsh, but every loss in real trading comes at a cost. A major mistake can knock you out entirely. That’s why some people can’t make money no matter how much they practice on a demo.
**The Trap of Good News Is the Easiest to Overlook**
There’s a cruel market rule: at the moment good news is announced, it’s often when the big players start to offload. So if you don’t exit on the day of the good news, you must reduce your position when the market opens high the next day. Many people suffer big losses at this stage.
**Position Management Before Holidays**
Don’t go against historical patterns. Data shows that it’s rare not to see a decline before holidays; a sharp drop is actually the norm. So, before the holiday arrives, you must lighten your positions.
**The Correct Posture for Medium-Long Term Holding**
Medium-long term isn’t about buying and holding blindly; it’s about dynamic, rolling operations. Always keep some cash on hand. Sell appropriately at high points during rebounds, and have bullets ready to buy when prices drop. Repeating this cycle allows your account to grow steadily.
**Two Core Elements of Short-Term Trading**
To do short-term trading, focus on two things: trading volume and candlestick patterns. Coins with sufficient liquidity and genuine volatility are worth participating in. Those with dull trading activity are traps, no matter how cheap they seem.
**Rhythm Is More Important Than Direction Prediction**
Slow declines often lead to slow rebounds, while rapid crashes are usually followed by quick surges. The ability to understand this market rhythm is far more important than simply predicting whether prices will go up or down.
**Stop-Loss Is Survival, Not Giving Up**
If you’re wrong, admit it immediately—don’t stubbornly hold on. Stop-loss isn’t a sign of failure but a necessary measure to protect your capital. As long as your principal remains, opportunities will always exist.
**Details in Short-Term Operations**
If you’re doing short-term trading, you must keep a close eye on 15-minute candlestick charts. Combining candlesticks with KDJ indicators isn’t for predicting the future but for precisely controlling each entry and exit rhythm.
**Precision of Methods Is More Critical Than Quantity**
Having more trading techniques and strategies isn’t as good as mastering one thoroughly. People who consistently make money usually have a few well-honed methodologies. Repeating one move to perfection often yields far better results than half-baked multiple strategies.
Ultimately, I don’t tell stories or make empty promises; I focus on methods that can truly be implemented. If these insights can help you, then that’s the best outcome.