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Many people ask me: how did I manage to turn a few thousand USDT into what I have now? It's simple—just one very "basic" approach: daily reviews, volume analysis, and position management.
Here are the most useful insights I can share with you in plain language:
The market rises slowly and falls fast—that's normal. When it's climbing gradually, don't rush to exit. That's likely just big money quietly accumulating. But once volume spikes on a dump, that's not a pullback—that's someone liquidating.
Most people love doing one thing: panic buying the dip when prices crash. Most of these sharp selloffs aren't opportunities—they're the final death blow. Real bottoms never let you buy so easily.
Here's a detail many miss: at the top, the real danger isn't the crash—it's the silence. When price sits at highs but volume keeps shrinking, that's critical. It means big money is done playing. Only retail traders are left passing bags to each other. Same at the bottom—don't get excited by one volume spike. What actually works is when volume has been compressed for a long time, then starts expanding consistently.
Candles are just the result. Volume is the process. While you're staring at charts looking for patterns, professionals track where the money flows.
Here's the harder truth: most people don't lose because of bad technique—they lose because of themselves. They chase during rallies, panic-sell during crashes, and think "I'll just wait" after mistakes. The market loves harvesting these people.
My biggest change over the years? Three words: no impulsive moves. Exit when you should. Wait when you should. Sometimes doing nothing all day is your most profitable trade.
To actually survive this market, remember: opportunities are endless, but you have to stay alive first.
Among everyone I've mentored, some turned hundreds of USDT into real gains, others got liquidated overnight. The difference isn't the market conditions—it's whether they had guidance and discipline.
If you're still trading recklessly with your emotions in control, then you don't lack technique. You lack a system to keep yourself stable.