#美国证券交易委员会与商品期货交易委员会在加密资产监管领域的协作 # Trading Survival Rules



In the crypto market, accurately catching one trend per year can outlast 300 days of reckless trading. That’s the difference.

People with less capital are actually at an advantage — the real killer of accounts is never the loss itself, but emotional outbursts, indecisiveness, and deviation from the plan.

The market does not reward diligence. It only rewards those who have patience and determination.

The money you can make is only within your cognitive scope. Beyond that? Don’t even think about it.

Now, people who can’t even hold a 10x trend steadily are still dreaming of 100x? Wake up — if you can’t even stabilize a small wind, how do you expect to withstand a typhoon?

Dying a few more times in a demo account is no shame, but a single liquidation in a real account means you’re out for good. Every mistake in the demo is a talisman for your survival in the future.

When good news appears, that’s not a signal for retail investors to jump in — it’s a window for big funds to exit. When you see the news and rush in passionately, the big players have already pressed the sell button.

No matter how good the project is, it’s useless if you don’t know when to sell. Even if the coin is awesome, if you don’t understand when to harvest, you’ll end up being the one harvested.

Not reducing your position before holidays? That’s basically giving your capital to the big players as a sacrificial lamb. While others are enjoying hotpot and singing outside, you’re still heart pounding in front of the screen. Big bearish candles are no joke.

Low volume at the bottom is not a signal; the real signal to run is — don’t wait for the market to suddenly cut you. That’s the cruel reality of crypto.

The meaning of volume increase is completely different: volume at the bottom is an opportunity, volume at the top is a warning. Understand this well, and you can reduce your losses by at least 30%.

Mid-term trading relies on rolling positions to accumulate gains; short-term trading depends on timing and rhythm. Stay away from coins with low trading volume — they’re just gentle traps.

Coins with slow decline tend to have limited rebound strength; coins that drop sharply tend to rebound fiercely. Remember this rule: after violent sell-offs, there’s usually a violent surge.

Coins that move exactly in sync with the overall market? That means no one is controlling the market — they’re just free-range coins. Don’t hold illusions about them. Where are the real opportunities? In coins that have been sideways for a long time and then suddenly surge — there’s definitely a big player behind them.

Those seemingly soaring trends are actually driven by big funds behind the scenes.

If you buy wrong and refuse to admit it, that’s not stubbornness — that’s giving free money to the market.

Real skill isn’t about learning more techniques, but about having methods that keep you alive. The common routines for newbies to get liquidated are: chasing high without selling, buying recklessly during dips, and operating blindly during sideways markets — these three cover about 90% of rookie failures.

Be cautious of greed when prices rise, and don’t panic when they fall. If you truly stay calm, the market will have no tricks left.

Remember the last sentence: Winning in crypto isn’t about talent; it’s about a clear mind, enough stability, and knowing when to act and when to wait.
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BottomMisservip
· 9h ago
That's so true. I'm the type who doesn't feel pain after dying ten times in a simulation, but would completely social avoid after a real liquidation. --- Whenever good news comes out, I rush in, only to find out I was the last retail investor to get on board. --- I love trading sideways coins the most, but every time I get gently harvested by the main players. --- Can't hold onto 10x, but must dream of 100x. Isn't that me? Hahaha. --- People who stubbornly hold positions before holidays are really using their money to show loyalty to the main players. --- How hard it is to admit mistakes. Anyway, holding on might lead to a rebound, and then it actually rebounds. --- I only make money once a year, but the remaining 300 days are all losses—that's my daily routine. --- Emotional outbursts are more damaging to the account than losses. That really hit me. --- I've never caught the coins that suddenly take off; all I caught were traps. --- Coins with low trading volume are gentle traps. How many times have I walked into them?
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StableNomadvip
· 9h ago
ngl the "one perfect trade beats 300 days of chaos" thing hits different after watching luna implode... statistically speaking tho, most people still can't execute it
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GasWastervip
· 10h ago
Even the simulated trading accounts are dying hard, how dare to touch real accounts That's a very extreme statement, but it is indeed like that Those who rush in after reading the news have really become leeks Money within cognition, I accept this statement Not admitting mistakes is just giving money to the market, speechless One precise operation once a year is better than a year's reckless messing around, it's heartbreaking Those who don't reduce their positions before holidays are truly brave
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NeverVoteOnDAOvip
· 10h ago
You are exactly right, it's all about mindset and execution. --- It's the same survival rule, but 90% of people still get wiped out after reading it. --- The good news of selling the top is really heartbreaking; I always realize too late. --- Money within my cognition... I just earn it for nothing. --- People who haven't reduced their positions before holidays should be eating dirt now. --- There are probably many people who got it backwards by volume at the bottom and volume at the top. --- The despair of dying a hundred times in a simulated account but not surviving in a real account. --- Staying steady is the biggest winning strategy; it sounds simple but is really hell to do. --- Those coins that suddenly take off must have something fishy behind them. --- Buying wrong and not admitting it is really just giving away money; this is the cruelest.
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GasBanditvip
· 10h ago
Once-a-year precise operation, three hundred days of chaos and tinkering, that's a very sharp statement. I agree with this theory, it's just that too few people are executing it. Losing a few times on a demo account doesn't hurt, but if you blow up a real account once, you're out immediately—that's heartbreaking. When good news hits, big players have already run away, retail investors are always the last to catch the bag. Whether you can sell is a hundred times more important than whether you can buy. Not admitting mistakes is just giving money to the market, that's what most people do. Emotional control > ability to select coins, this order is spot on. Sticking stubbornly before holidays is really like working for the big players. A true opportunity is when volume increases at the bottom; when volume surges at the top, it's time to run. Simple and straight to the point. Coins that move in sync with the market are definitely not controlled; they are just casually held, don't expect too much. Violent sell-offs are followed by violent rebounds, this rule is always accurate. Not selling when prices rise, buying recklessly during dips, and operating blindly during sideways trading—these three tricks really send 95% of the retail investors away. I especially agree with the last sentence: stability and knowing when to exit—that's the real dividing line.
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