Not long ago, a fan talked to me about his two-year experience in trading cryptocurrencies: eager to get rich quickly, he always entered with heavy positions, never set stop-losses, and as a result, he almost lost confidence after several liquidation events.
After learning my rolling position strategy, he managed to turn 3,000U into 9,700U in just three weeks, completely breaking out of the loss cycle. I didn't tell him any complicated theories, only highlighted one core logic: Start with small positions to test the waters. When profitable, roll the profits into the next trade as "ammunition"—even if stop-losses are hit, only the previously earned profits are lost, and the principal remains safe. For example, in the first trade, he only invested 20% of his principal. When the profit reached 2%, he locked in part of the profit and used the remaining profit to open a new position. I also told him that before each trade, he must pass through "three checkpoints": 1. Check market sentiment—when everyone is shouting "must rise," stop first to avoid chasing highs; 2. Watch the main force's movements—wait for clear accumulation signals before entering, don’t guess blindly based on feelings; 3. Check your own state—if feeling anxious or wanting to gamble, absolutely do not trade. He strictly followed these rules, no longer went all-in or blindly followed various "signal groups," and steadily progressed step by step. Later, he told me that even if he only earns 100U now, he’s not in a rush to withdraw. Instead, he uses that part of the profit to open new trades—if he loses, the principal remains unaffected, and he feels very secure. This is actually the key: Many people want to cash out after earning a little, feeling secure; but those who can truly sustain profits are often the ones willing to roll their profits over. Rolling positions doesn’t require winning every time. Even if you win 6 out of 10 times, your account can still steadily double. The crypto world is never short of luck; what’s lacking is discipline. Watching him transform from a "hurry to get rich" retail trader into a "protect the principal first, then roll profits" steady player, I feel even more gratified—this is the way to survive longer in the market. The road has already been
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Not long ago, a fan talked to me about his two-year experience in trading cryptocurrencies: eager to get rich quickly, he always entered with heavy positions, never set stop-losses, and as a result, he almost lost confidence after several liquidation events.
After learning my rolling position strategy, he managed to turn 3,000U into 9,700U in just three weeks, completely breaking out of the loss cycle.
I didn't tell him any complicated theories, only highlighted one core logic:
Start with small positions to test the waters. When profitable, roll the profits into the next trade as "ammunition"—even if stop-losses are hit, only the previously earned profits are lost, and the principal remains safe.
For example, in the first trade, he only invested 20% of his principal. When the profit reached 2%, he locked in part of the profit and used the remaining profit to open a new position.
I also told him that before each trade, he must pass through "three checkpoints":
1. Check market sentiment—when everyone is shouting "must rise," stop first to avoid chasing highs;
2. Watch the main force's movements—wait for clear accumulation signals before entering, don’t guess blindly based on feelings;
3. Check your own state—if feeling anxious or wanting to gamble, absolutely do not trade.
He strictly followed these rules, no longer went all-in or blindly followed various "signal groups," and steadily progressed step by step.
Later, he told me that even if he only earns 100U now, he’s not in a rush to withdraw. Instead, he uses that part of the profit to open new trades—if he loses, the principal remains unaffected, and he feels very secure.
This is actually the key:
Many people want to cash out after earning a little, feeling secure; but those who can truly sustain profits are often the ones willing to roll their profits over.
Rolling positions doesn’t require winning every time. Even if you win 6 out of 10 times, your account can still steadily double.
The crypto world is never short of luck; what’s lacking is discipline.
Watching him transform from a "hurry to get rich" retail trader into a "protect the principal first, then roll profits" steady player, I feel even more gratified—this is the way to survive longer in the market.
The road has already been