I did a small statistics: from a small principal steadily growing to 1 million, many people overlook one fact — making money quickly is not as good as making money steadily.
In the early stages, with a small principal, you simply can't afford to lose. Instead of chasing the feeling of getting rich overnight, it's better to focus on three words: reproducible.
Why is it easy to flip over when rolling positions? Just listen to these real scenarios and you'll understand. When the market slightly fluctuates, you can't sit still and open positions; seeing one opportunity, you push all your chips in; a wave of losses, and you're completely wiped out — no matter how smart this approach is, it can't save you.
On the other hand, we only focus on high-probability opportunities. For example, the first large bullish candle after a trend reversal, or the moment when a volume breakout occurs at a key resistance level, or the timing when a large cycle completes accumulation and prepares to launch. These are all traceable.
The execution level is even more critical. Suppose you have a principal of 50,000, and you use 10% per trade, which is 5,000. Set a stop loss at about 2%, roughly 100 bucks. What's the benefit of doing this? Even if you make 5 mistakes, it won't hurt your bones. But once you get the rhythm right, turning 5,000 into 10,000, then 10,000 into 23,000, and after three or four consecutive operations, breaking through 1 million is not a dream at all.
A fan used this method, and in 7 months, turned 8,000 into 630,000. It's not some extraordinary talent; frankly, it's just executing the methodology properly. Persistence + patience + discipline, the rest is up to time.
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MetaMaskVictim
· 3h ago
It sounds good, but once you try to execute, you'll realize how difficult it really is. How many people are stuck at this mental hurdle?
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SleepTrader
· 12-27 08:54
Sounds good, but there are not many who can really stick with it.
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TokenStorm
· 12-27 08:53
The data looks good, but the key question is—does this logic really hold up in a bear market?
Wait, let me backtest this stop-loss level... Hmm, the risk coefficient does seem controllable, but I still believe that the real opportunity is in the eye of the storm.
It's easy to say, but in practice, I can't sit still with a 10% position limit. I always want to add more [Dog Head].
That fan case data is fine, but how many people can replicate it with enough discipline? I admit, I'm not that person.
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RektRecorder
· 12-27 08:43
That's right, the key is really execution. Many people know what to do but can't follow through.
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SighingCashier
· 12-27 08:30
It sounds good, but how many can truly stick with it?
I did a small statistics: from a small principal steadily growing to 1 million, many people overlook one fact — making money quickly is not as good as making money steadily.
In the early stages, with a small principal, you simply can't afford to lose. Instead of chasing the feeling of getting rich overnight, it's better to focus on three words: reproducible.
Why is it easy to flip over when rolling positions? Just listen to these real scenarios and you'll understand. When the market slightly fluctuates, you can't sit still and open positions; seeing one opportunity, you push all your chips in; a wave of losses, and you're completely wiped out — no matter how smart this approach is, it can't save you.
On the other hand, we only focus on high-probability opportunities. For example, the first large bullish candle after a trend reversal, or the moment when a volume breakout occurs at a key resistance level, or the timing when a large cycle completes accumulation and prepares to launch. These are all traceable.
The execution level is even more critical. Suppose you have a principal of 50,000, and you use 10% per trade, which is 5,000. Set a stop loss at about 2%, roughly 100 bucks. What's the benefit of doing this? Even if you make 5 mistakes, it won't hurt your bones. But once you get the rhythm right, turning 5,000 into 10,000, then 10,000 into 23,000, and after three or four consecutive operations, breaking through 1 million is not a dream at all.
A fan used this method, and in 7 months, turned 8,000 into 630,000. It's not some extraordinary talent; frankly, it's just executing the methodology properly. Persistence + patience + discipline, the rest is up to time.