#Strategy加仓BTC I used to be a frequent victim of liquidation, and account shrinkage was a common occurrence. The turning point came—so I decided to split my funds into two parts. The principal is kept in a cold wallet, which I never touch; even if I make a mistake, I only lose unrealized gains. The other half is used for compounding interest, which is the real buffer zone.
In five months, an account with less than 1,000 USD grew to 47,000 USD. It’s not about gambling everything on a single bet, but about maintaining a 3% daily compound interest. Sounds small? Over 120 trading days, it compounds to 34 times. Compared to those dreaming of 100x coins every day, this slow-paced approach is actually the most reliable way for ordinary people to make money.
I’ve summarized three rules that basically end previous reckless operations:
**Follow the Trend with Chips** Focus only on daily bullish targets, and avoid counter-trend bottom fishing. Enter only when the 1-hour chart pulls back to EXPMA12; if the needle doesn’t turn red, do not add to the position. This approach is slow but has a high win rate.
**Separate Profits** Take profit at 3% immediately by splitting the position into three parts: one part is taken out directly as cash, one part is rolled over to increase gains, and one part is kept as insurance against pullbacks. By cycling this way, the stop-loss levels naturally rise.
**Discipline is the Bottom Line** Limit yourself to a maximum of two trades per day, and close the software when the time is up. Spend 10 minutes every night reviewing your trades and writing down mistakes so you never fall into the same trap twice.
Most of my recent trades follow this logic. When ETH retraced to previous highs, trading volume shrank by 30%. I entered at that point and earned 3.8% in 12 hours. When ARB broke through the triangle’s lower trendline, I took 2.9%. After BNB volume surged and broke out, I rolled over the position and doubled my money. These are not predictions; they are a combination of structure, volume, and execution.
Honestly, most people lose at night. When it’s late, the urge to make up for losses grows stronger, and it becomes easier to get liquidated. The problem isn’t effort; it’s the lamp that’s always on—the lamp is your trading discipline.
Market doesn’t wait, and liquidation doesn’t either. What determines victory or defeat is often your ability to restrain yourself.
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RektButStillHere
· 16h ago
It sounds good, but how many can truly stick with it?
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MemeKingNFT
· 01-18 08:06
Storing principal in a cold wallet is quite similar to the early logic of digital collectibles and real estate—it's just that they have faith, while you're cutting losses... A 3% compound interest to 34 times sounds reasonable, but when market sentiment shifts, the structure + volume approach needs to be reevaluated.
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ForkTongue
· 01-18 08:04
Looking at these numbers, compound interest is really amazing... But I still believe more in the saying "Most people fail at night."
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MetaNomad
· 01-18 08:03
That's right, self-discipline is the hardest part. I used to be the type to get restless at night too, but now I'll try your method.
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pumpamentalist
· 01-18 08:00
Really, self-discipline is spot on. The urge to trade at night is truly a killer.
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But the number from 1,000 to 47,000... depends on the authenticity of the operation, feels a bit uncertain.
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3% compound interest sounds simple, but how many actually stick with it...
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I approve of the position splitting logic; at least the risk of liquidation is indeed reduced.
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Turning off the software on time... I need to learn this trick. That's how I got liquidated at night.
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Honestly, discipline is much harder than technical skills. Most people can't stick to it for more than two weeks.
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Rebalancing to double your position? Just listen to this number; better to be cautious.
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Storing the principal in a cold wallet is a pretty good idea, definitely better than messing around all in on exchanges.
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Raising the stop-loss level sounds comfortable, but the premise is that you really need to earn 3% first.
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I just want to ask, has this logic been tested in a bear market?
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How many people who write daily reviews actually change their pitfalls... most have forgotten.
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BridgeTrustFund
· 01-18 07:41
Discipline is really important. I need to learn to close the app at night.
#Strategy加仓BTC I used to be a frequent victim of liquidation, and account shrinkage was a common occurrence. The turning point came—so I decided to split my funds into two parts. The principal is kept in a cold wallet, which I never touch; even if I make a mistake, I only lose unrealized gains. The other half is used for compounding interest, which is the real buffer zone.
In five months, an account with less than 1,000 USD grew to 47,000 USD. It’s not about gambling everything on a single bet, but about maintaining a 3% daily compound interest. Sounds small? Over 120 trading days, it compounds to 34 times. Compared to those dreaming of 100x coins every day, this slow-paced approach is actually the most reliable way for ordinary people to make money.
I’ve summarized three rules that basically end previous reckless operations:
**Follow the Trend with Chips** Focus only on daily bullish targets, and avoid counter-trend bottom fishing. Enter only when the 1-hour chart pulls back to EXPMA12; if the needle doesn’t turn red, do not add to the position. This approach is slow but has a high win rate.
**Separate Profits** Take profit at 3% immediately by splitting the position into three parts: one part is taken out directly as cash, one part is rolled over to increase gains, and one part is kept as insurance against pullbacks. By cycling this way, the stop-loss levels naturally rise.
**Discipline is the Bottom Line** Limit yourself to a maximum of two trades per day, and close the software when the time is up. Spend 10 minutes every night reviewing your trades and writing down mistakes so you never fall into the same trap twice.
Most of my recent trades follow this logic. When ETH retraced to previous highs, trading volume shrank by 30%. I entered at that point and earned 3.8% in 12 hours. When ARB broke through the triangle’s lower trendline, I took 2.9%. After BNB volume surged and broke out, I rolled over the position and doubled my money. These are not predictions; they are a combination of structure, volume, and execution.
Honestly, most people lose at night. When it’s late, the urge to make up for losses grows stronger, and it becomes easier to get liquidated. The problem isn’t effort; it’s the lamp that’s always on—the lamp is your trading discipline.
Market doesn’t wait, and liquidation doesn’t either. What determines victory or defeat is often your ability to restrain yourself.