YuanYuanjieLovesTrading

vip
Futures Trading Strategist
The crypto circle has been repeatedly working on this for 8-9 years, mainly focusing on contract analysis.
The worst time I lost money the most actually led me to the way to make profits later.
In 2021, I lost 50k USDT in a single night.
It wasn’t because of liquidation, and it wasn’t because I went all-in.
It was one small loss at a time—gradually accumulating—until I finally crippled my account.
What hurt the most was that during that period I kept thinking I had no problem.
Every trade had a stop-loss, I followed discipline strictly, didn’t hold through, and didn’t chase after pumps or sell into dumps.
So what happened anyway?
My account still kept shrinking bit by bit.
Later, I went through eve
ETH2.87%
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$ETH The current price is moving sideways in the 1748~1794 range, with a slight rebound. Overall, it is in a consolidation phase after a big drop. At this time, chasing higher blindly or shorting against the trend in this middle zone carries relatively high risk, but the bigger trend is still bearish. During the decline from 1848.00, the trading volume below has clearly increased, indicating strong sell pressure at higher levels. If the price breaks down through the previous swing low and the strong 1736 support, the entire rebound structure will be damaged.
Conservative strategy: wait for th
ETH2.87%
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HTXchen1:
Go for it 👊
How much principal is needed to achieve financial freedom, luxury cars and mansions, and travel the world?
Many people think you must have a large amount of capital to have a chance.
But when I started, I only had 1,200 USDT in principal, and my losses took me down to just 400 USDT.
Back then, like many new traders, I also fantasized about getting rich overnight:
chasing pumps and selling dips, using high leverage, and putting all my money into low-cap altcoins.
In the end, reality gave me a harsh lesson.
Later, I finally understood: the crypto market isn’t a casino. If you want to survive lon
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Someone always asks me: Is there a simple way to trade crypto, without having to watch the charts every day?
Yes—and the simpler it is, the easier it is to stick with.
I’ve always followed three principles:
① Don’t chase pumps.
If you enter because someone else is already making money, chances are it’s already late. Waiting for a pullback is safer than buying at a high.
② Don’t go all-in.
Keep some room. If you’re willing to buy during the pullback, you’ll still have “ammo” when opportunities come.
③ Don’t rush trades.
If you’re not sure, just wait. The market won’t end just because you didn’t
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Small capital wants to turn things around—what matters most is not how fast you can make money, but not getting knocked out early.
Many people think that because their principal is small, they must take a shot.
But the reality is: if you win, it may just be luck; if you lose, you may not even get the next chance.
I’ve seen plenty of people with small capital who make a little profit, then start going all-in and using leverage—until one last mistake wipes out all the profits from before.
What truly determines whether you can grow big is not how much you make on a single trade, but wheth
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The harshest thing in crypto isn’t that you can’t make money—it’s that once you’ve made it, you can’t hold onto it.
I’ve seen too many people: they earn all year in a bull market, but in just a few months of a bear market, they hand everything back to the market.
When prices rise, they feel it can still go higher, so they don’t take profits; when prices fall, they feel it will bounce back, so they don’t cut losses.
In the end, the profits are gone—and the principal shrinks along with them.
Many people’s biggest mistake is treating unrealized gains as their own money.
In fact, the numbers in yo
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Many people think liquidation happens on the last big bearish candle, but that’s not true.
The real liquidation usually starts with the very first mistaken trade.
At first, you go in heavy and leverage high, thinking you can double quickly. You win once and feel like you’ve found the pattern, then you lose once and don’t want to admit you were wrong. $HYPER
Then you start holding the position through adverse moves.
Even when it reaches your stop-loss level, you tell yourself, “Wait a bit longer,” and the small loss gets dragged into a big one. $SNDKB
After the loss, emotions begin to take ov
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Under $10,000, many people lose money not because they have no opportunities, but because they’re too impatient.
They always think they can turn it around with one heavy position—but the principal doesn’t grow; instead, they get knocked out first.
The people who can truly grow small capital don’t rely on gambling—they rely on execution.
I’ve seen someone go from a few thousand USDT little by little to tens of thousands of USDT, and what they used was a simple, repeatable method:
First, pick coins by trend.
Don’t chase news or follow emotions—only take opportunities that fit the trend.
Second,
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Can you still make money after entering the crypto circle now?
Yes.
But the people who make money don’t rely on luck—they rely on discipline. $BTC
Many beginners come in and immediately chase pumps and dumps, trade frequently, and blindly add leverage. In the end, it’s not that they never had a chance—it’s that they didn’t hold onto their principal.
Those who can truly profit long-term all have a few common traits:
First, invest only with spare money.
If losses won’t affect your life, you can stay rational.
Second, prioritize mainstream assets.
Get BTC and ETH right first, then consider other
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How do you roll over a small account with 1,000U?
Many people misunderstand it.
If you make a few dozen U and then keep putting all your funds in, that’s not rolling over—it’s just amplifying risk.
The real rolling-over has only one core sentence: roll with profits, not with principal.
My approach is simple:
First, split your capital.
Don’t go all-in with 1,000U at once. Only move a small portion each time, test and adjust first, then decide whether to add more.
Second, use only profit to increase your position.
After you make money, use your earnings to roll into the next trade; once you stop
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Don’t understand technical analysis—does that mean you can’t make money?
Actually, no.
Technical analysis is useful, but what determines whether you can stay in the market long-term is more your execution.
Many people lose money not because they can’t read candlesticks, but because they lose on three issues:
Placing orders too hastily, holding too anxiously, and having a too chaotic mindset.
Chasing after price goes up, but refusing to leave when it pulls back—until the next round of volatility gives back all the profits.
Later I summed up the three most important words in trading:
Slow, endur
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$3,000 to enter the crypto circle—does it even make sense?
Yes.
But the prerequisite is that you don’t treat it as a comeback chip; treat it as a cost of growth.
Converted down, it’s a few hundred in USDT—so in the market, it’s not big money.
But the real danger has never been that the principal is small; it’s using a small principal to gamble.
When many newcomers enter, they immediately think about doubling, doing ten times—going all-in and using leverage. Once the market turns against them, their mindset collapses, and in the end they lose more and keep averaging down. $HYPE
If I used $3,00
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10 years ago, I put all my savings—20,000 yuan—into a crypto exchange account. My hands were shaking.
Now there’s 34 million in the account. The number is pretty big, but in my mind there’s actually no big波澜.
Money is only part of it, but what the past 10 years磨出来 is more valuable than the money. $ETH
For this funds management rule, I sentenced myself to death—never go all-in; at most, take out 20% to try.
Each trade’s loss stays within 10%. Even if I miss a move five times in a row, I only get hurt by half. But once I catch one wave, I get it all back. $LAB
A lot of people lose and won’t ex
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From 2,100 USDT, in less than two months, I stubbornly pushed it to 75k USDT. $B
Saying it out loud, I feel it’s a bit ridiculous myself, but the way I trade crypto is just one word—idiotic.
No candlestick charts, no doing T, and I still can’t even fully name indicators like MACD or RSI.
I just relied on this dumb method and charged straight upward. $BEAT
You might treat this like a story, but the brothers I trade with—some have already gone full-time, some changed cars, and some even scraped together a down payment.
Honestly, if people like me can turn things around, why can’t you? $LAB
Wh
BEAT1.72%
LAB-32.19%
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From trembling hands that didn’t dare place an order to steadily walking the long road of trading
When I first entered the market with 20k USDT, I held the mouse for half a day, afraid to click confirm. All I could think about was: don’t let me get liquidated.
Now that my capital size has grown, I don’t have that tight, high-alert feeling anymore. It’s not that I have no concept of money—I've already figured it out: whether I can make fast money or big money is secondary. The core is being able to keep living in the market.
I never go all-in with my position. I always keep my exposure within a
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Admitting defeat early is a required lesson in trading
When you first enter the trading world, everyone gets stubborn: as soon as you enter the market you get trapped, right after you cut losses the price immediately takes off, and you always feel like the market is singling you out.
After grinding through it for a long time, you finally figure it out: the market has no time to target anyone. The problem was never with the market—it's that before entering you never waited for signal confirmation, you just rushed in.
Most losses are caused by emotions running ahead of the rules: when you
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When you’re down to the point of almost bottoming out, don’t think about getting it back $EVAA
In a moment when your state collapses—your account bleeding out on every 1K U, frequent liquidations, and everything you do is a mess—don’t keep fixating on the obsession of breaking even and hard-fighting. Treat “staying alive” as the only goal first. $HYPE
There’s nothing fancy about the method—one core rule: stop all aggressive trading immediately, save your life first, then talk about making money.
1. Cut the position in half: with a small amount of capital, only put 10%-20% on trial trades; th
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lytruy8d:
Hop on! 🚗
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Start with a small amount—there’s basically no shortcut $EVAA
People always ask me how I start with a small amount of capital. I’m the same too—I built up from just a few thousand USDT step by step. There’s no backdoor for overnight wealth; it all comes down to finding the right method and grinding it out to the end. $HYPE
With a small principal, the biggest taboo is greed. Don’t think the market is always handing out money-picking opportunities. The steadiest play with small capital is to wait—wait for a period when certainty is fully priced in, catch the move to take profit and leave. Don’
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Making money in crypto is never about being clever$EVAA
In the crypto world, the people who truly achieve big results are not necessarily the most quick-witted, but they are always the ones who can stay calm the longest. They can resist the temptation to chase pumps, and dare to stay in cash waiting for the right opportunity. Even when the whole market is going crazy with calls, they can still hold onto their own rhythm without following the crowd.
A lot of people rush in hoping to turn things around through crypto, but what ultimately creates the gap is never simply who’s bold enough to go a
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