#美国就业数据表现强劲超出预期 From Zero to Tens of Millions: An Eight-Year Summary of Experiences in the Cryptocurrency Market
If you've been in the crypto space for over a year and your account hasn't broken the million mark, take a moment to listen to the following words—this might change your understanding of trading.
Focus on long-term holding. When your capital is less than 200,000, aim for one genuine major upward wave per year. Don't day after day chase short-term gains, chase highs with full positions and sell lows, only to end up in the same place after a year. Patience is more valuable than hard work.
First, practice repeatedly in a simulated environment. Master the logic before using real money. Failures in a demo account cost nothing, but a single critical mistake in real trading can eliminate you entirely. Your level of understanding and mental resilience must always stay ahead of your capital size.
The day a positive news is released is often not the best selling point—wait until the next day’s high open to realize profits. There is a market rule: after major positive news is confirmed, the trend often reverses. Don’t be greedy for the last piece of meat; you might get bitten.
One week before holidays, reduce your positions. Historical data repeatedly shows that during holidays, there tends to be significant selling pressure. Staying in cash or lightly positioned during holidays is better than being caught off guard by sudden news.
For medium- and long-term strategies, keep your positions flexible. Always keep some cash on hand for opportunities, sell in parts at high levels, and build positions gradually at low levels. Cyclical management of your positions will make you more stable.
For short-term trading, focus on volume and candlestick patterns. Choose coins with high volatility and active trading volume; stagnant coins have no chance.
The pace of decline determines the strength of the rebound. Slow declines lead to sluggish rebounds, while fierce declines often result in fierce rebounds. Understand this rhythm well—don’t keep bottom-fishing during slow declines.
Cut losses immediately when in the red. No matter how good the story, it won't recover your principal. Protecting your capital is the only way to stay in the game.
For short-term trading, focus on 15-minute candlestick charts combined with KDJ indicators. Identify key price levels in small cycles, and buy/sell signals will become clear. Overcomplicating is just noise.
Master two or three trading systems thoroughly enough. Too many indicators are hard to digest. Perfecting one set of logic will make your combat effectiveness far superior to those trying everything at once.
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ProbablyNothing
· 2025-12-21 18:32
Listen, these "experiences" sound nice, but those who have actually survived know - luck accounts for half, and the rest is skill.
What's going on, why do I feel like this is just redecorating the pit that everyone has lost in?
Damn, I've really lost money on this holiday reduce position thing, why can't I change this habit?
Wait, he said the principal shouldn't exceed 200,000 aiming for a main rise once, so shouldn't I find another way with this broken account?
He's right, it's just that no one can do it, how many can truly hold back? I certainly don't have that kind of self-discipline.
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tx_pending_forever
· 2025-12-21 06:56
Stop loss is truly the greatest practice; how many people have perished because they couldn't bear to make this cut.
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StablecoinSkeptic
· 2025-12-18 23:09
You're absolutely right. I keep losing on the daily short-term trades. After a year of messing around, I still have the same principal, and now I regret it immensely.
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OnchainDetective
· 2025-12-18 23:05
Tracking this trading system based on on-chain data... Well, the logic itself is sound, but the key issue is—how many people can really exit in batches at high levels? Usually, they just hold on until liquidation.
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AirdropChaser
· 2025-12-18 22:58
Well said, really. These past two years, I've been day trading every day, and after a year, I still have the same amount of capital. That kind of hits home, haha.
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GasFeeCryBaby
· 2025-12-18 22:54
Being patient is definitely the right thing, but most people simply can't do it haha
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ForkThisDAO
· 2025-12-18 22:52
It's the same theory again, but the key is execution, buddy. No matter how well you explain, the account will still blow up.
#美国就业数据表现强劲超出预期 From Zero to Tens of Millions: An Eight-Year Summary of Experiences in the Cryptocurrency Market
If you've been in the crypto space for over a year and your account hasn't broken the million mark, take a moment to listen to the following words—this might change your understanding of trading.
Focus on long-term holding. When your capital is less than 200,000, aim for one genuine major upward wave per year. Don't day after day chase short-term gains, chase highs with full positions and sell lows, only to end up in the same place after a year. Patience is more valuable than hard work.
First, practice repeatedly in a simulated environment. Master the logic before using real money. Failures in a demo account cost nothing, but a single critical mistake in real trading can eliminate you entirely. Your level of understanding and mental resilience must always stay ahead of your capital size.
The day a positive news is released is often not the best selling point—wait until the next day’s high open to realize profits. There is a market rule: after major positive news is confirmed, the trend often reverses. Don’t be greedy for the last piece of meat; you might get bitten.
One week before holidays, reduce your positions. Historical data repeatedly shows that during holidays, there tends to be significant selling pressure. Staying in cash or lightly positioned during holidays is better than being caught off guard by sudden news.
For medium- and long-term strategies, keep your positions flexible. Always keep some cash on hand for opportunities, sell in parts at high levels, and build positions gradually at low levels. Cyclical management of your positions will make you more stable.
For short-term trading, focus on volume and candlestick patterns. Choose coins with high volatility and active trading volume; stagnant coins have no chance.
The pace of decline determines the strength of the rebound. Slow declines lead to sluggish rebounds, while fierce declines often result in fierce rebounds. Understand this rhythm well—don’t keep bottom-fishing during slow declines.
Cut losses immediately when in the red. No matter how good the story, it won't recover your principal. Protecting your capital is the only way to stay in the game.
For short-term trading, focus on 15-minute candlestick charts combined with KDJ indicators. Identify key price levels in small cycles, and buy/sell signals will become clear. Overcomplicating is just noise.
Master two or three trading systems thoroughly enough. Too many indicators are hard to digest. Perfecting one set of logic will make your combat effectiveness far superior to those trying everything at once.