A friend started with 600U and over three months accumulated to 20,000U, all without a single liquidation. It may seem like luck, but in fact, three core rules are at play behind the scenes.
**Fund Layering: Only by Staying Alive Can You Make Money**
Divide the principal into three parts, each 200U, with completely different purposes: the short-term portion aims for quick 3%-5% profits and takes profits when the market looks good; the swing trading portion holds trending positions for a few days; the hedging portion acts as insurance and remains untouched regardless of market movements. The benefit of this approach is—you always have an exit strategy. Many traders go all-in, feeling great when they profit, but their mindset collapses when they lose. Successful traders know how to leave themselves a backup plan.
**When the Trend Is Unclear, Keep Quiet**
Crypto markets often enter consolidation phases, which test your discipline the most. When there's no clear direction, stay out of the market and observe; don't try to guess the top or bottom. When a real opportunity appears, and the gain reaches about 12%, immediately halve your position to lock in profits. Many stubbornly hold onto their positions, hoping to catch the last bullish candle, only to be reversed when the trend turns.
**Discipline in Execution, Abandon Emotions**
The core rule is straightforward: cut losses at 2%, never bargain; take profits at 4% and reduce your position by half to let profits run; never add to a losing position—that's the typical gambler's mindset. Only by controlling your trading hand can you control your money.
That friend who started with 600U relied on this set of rules plus patience, turning a small fund into a substantial amount. In crypto markets, compared to prediction ability, discipline and risk management often determine the final victory.
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PaperHandsCriminal
· 8h ago
Exactly right, it's all about execution. I was a complete fool when I went all-in with full position before, losing everything and still insisting on adding more positions. A painful lesson.
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LidoStakeAddict
· 01-05 23:16
Wow, from 600U to 20,000? This guy really understood it, it's not just luck.
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ProposalManiac
· 01-05 07:55
This mechanism design is actually a classic example of incentive compatibility... Fund stratification essentially creates a multi-layered check-and-balance system for oneself; the one who survives until the end wins.
In simple terms, it relies on discipline to suppress emotions, with little to no luck involved. Those who go all-in with full positions are not really a trading strategy issue, but a governance failure—lack of self-restraint.
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rugged_again
· 01-05 07:46
To be honest, this theory sounds flawless, but very few people can actually stick with it.
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GateUser-74b10196
· 01-05 07:44
This guy is indeed tough, but to be honest, I think that 2% stop loss is a bit tight; it looks too uncomfortable.
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AirdropDreamBreaker
· 01-05 07:37
This set is indeed flawless; the key is still to follow the discipline.
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AirdropAnxiety
· 01-05 07:31
Exactly right, you need discipline; otherwise, you'd have been liquidated long ago.
A friend started with 600U and over three months accumulated to 20,000U, all without a single liquidation. It may seem like luck, but in fact, three core rules are at play behind the scenes.
**Fund Layering: Only by Staying Alive Can You Make Money**
Divide the principal into three parts, each 200U, with completely different purposes: the short-term portion aims for quick 3%-5% profits and takes profits when the market looks good; the swing trading portion holds trending positions for a few days; the hedging portion acts as insurance and remains untouched regardless of market movements. The benefit of this approach is—you always have an exit strategy. Many traders go all-in, feeling great when they profit, but their mindset collapses when they lose. Successful traders know how to leave themselves a backup plan.
**When the Trend Is Unclear, Keep Quiet**
Crypto markets often enter consolidation phases, which test your discipline the most. When there's no clear direction, stay out of the market and observe; don't try to guess the top or bottom. When a real opportunity appears, and the gain reaches about 12%, immediately halve your position to lock in profits. Many stubbornly hold onto their positions, hoping to catch the last bullish candle, only to be reversed when the trend turns.
**Discipline in Execution, Abandon Emotions**
The core rule is straightforward: cut losses at 2%, never bargain; take profits at 4% and reduce your position by half to let profits run; never add to a losing position—that's the typical gambler's mindset. Only by controlling your trading hand can you control your money.
That friend who started with 600U relied on this set of rules plus patience, turning a small fund into a substantial amount. In crypto markets, compared to prediction ability, discipline and risk management often determine the final victory.