Trading cryptocurrencies and stocks are essentially the same; the key is whether you can overcome a few hurdles.



Let's start with cognition. Many people get stuck here because they simply don't understand their own capabilities. Charlie Munger once said: Knowing what you don't know is more important than being smart. Too many investors fall victim to overconfidence, overestimating themselves by dozens of times. To survive longer, you need to draw a red line around your abilities and not cross it. Only then can your decisions be reliable and you can avoid those deadly pitfalls.

The first 1 million in capital accumulation is truly a watershed. Most retail investors start with just a few thousand dollars. To grow from zero to a million requires solid skills, a stable mindset, disciplined self-control, and patience. But the problem is, many fall behind due to frequent trading and chasing highs and lows. Once you cross this hurdle, the power of compound interest becomes evident, and subsequent planning becomes much more relaxed.

In terms of thinking, you should think like a business owner, not a trader. This is what Li Lu means. Don't obsess over the ups and downs of the K-line; focus on cash flow, competitiveness, and management—these are the hard facts. Think like a boss to grasp the essence of investing.

Mindset and discipline are a matter of life and death. The market tests human nature every day, and most people are driven by emotions. The truly profitable experts all have a set of ironclad discipline that can control greed and fear in their hearts.

What is the true face of investing? First, you need to be able to do the math and know when to act. Munger's approach is: don't play when disadvantages outweigh advantages; only act when advantages outweigh disadvantages. Simply put, measure the gap between intrinsic value and price, and don't be blinded by price fluctuations.

The last layer is the margin of safety. Graham regarded this as the most important. It determines whether you're investing or gambling. The margin of safety is the gap between price and value. Genuine investing must be based on in-depth analysis, ensuring your principal is secure and earning a reasonable return. Those who only focus on price movements are not investing—they're speculating.
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SmartContractDivervip
· 5h ago
That's right, but most people simply can't do it. They keep shouting about discipline and mindset, but as soon as they lose everything, they forget it all. The first 1 million is the real hurdle. I see a bunch of people around me get stuck there. Stay sober, don't be blinded by the ups and downs, those are all traps. Munger's theories sound sophisticated, but in practice, they fall apart. The concept of margin of safety sounds simple, but implementing it is extremely difficult.
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ThesisInvestorvip
· 6h ago
In plain terms, self-awareness is the most valuable; many people die because they overestimate themselves. A million yuan is indeed a threshold; if you can't endure it, you'll end up as a leek. Looking at candlestick charts for a long time is useless; you still need to focus on the fundamentals. Discipline can really save lives; once emotions take over, people start making suicidal moves. The safety margin is essentially a line drawn between investing and gambling; most people are actually gambling.
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ImpermanentPhobiavip
· 6h ago
That's right, but 90% of people know these principles; very few can actually put them into practice. I'm the kind of person who loses money every day, knowing when to cut losses but still holding onto the position.
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LiquidityLarryvip
· 6h ago
Basically, you need to recognize yourself and not overestimate your abilities. 1 million is really a dividing line; most people fail due to frequent trading. It's better to look at cash flow than candlestick charts; think like a boss, not a trader. Discipline is the key; mental manipulation is the most dangerous. Understanding the safety margin is true investing; everything else is just gambling.
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LiquidatedNotStirredvip
· 6h ago
That's correct, but frankly, most people fail at the first hurdle and lack the awareness. Really? The gap between turning a few thousand into a million is even harder than going to the moon. I've seen too many people frequently trading and then losing everything overnight. The real skill lies in the safety margin; most people simply can't tell the difference between investing and gambling.
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