#以太坊大户持仓变化 $ZEC, $XRP, $UNI these cryptocurrencies' market fluctuations, who can truly stabilize and double? A trader turned a $5,000 account into $140,000 in three months. The method isn't complicated—just strictly follow this "steady position sizing method."



There are no insider tips, no big influencers guiding, purely relying on discipline and patience. How does he do it?

**Step 1: Keep the initial position small, use low leverage**

A common mistake: seeing a 3% rise and wanting to open a full position with 10x leverage. I used to be impatient like that. Later, I changed my strategy—only risking 20% of the position with 3x leverage to test the waters. After earning $1,500, instead of going all-in immediately, I add another $500 and reduce leverage to 2x. Sounds conservative? This is the dividing line between surviving and making quick money.

**Step 2: Sideways market is a waiting period**

During BTC's two-week sideways movement, 99% of the market's participants were itching to trade, entering and exiting, losing heavily. But he remained steady as a rock—like a real turtle—completely still. Only when Bitcoin broke through a key zone did he act. The result? Most of the profits were eaten up by him, while those chasing the pump and selling at lows kept cutting losses. Money in crypto never comes every day; the key is to seize those few real opportunities.

**Step 3: Liquidation price = survival line**

The first thing when opening a position isn't profit or loss, but calculating where the liquidation price is. For example, if BTC is at 84,000, he sets the liquidation line below 76,000—leaving at least an 8,000-point safety margin, over 10% buffer. Others get liquidated after one spike, losing everything; he can withstand ten spikes and still stay lively. His words: "I'm most afraid of losing my life; as long as I have it, there are always opportunities." The secret to long-term profitability for ordinary people is: prioritizing survival over risking everything.

**Step 4: Lock in profits**

In summary, four rules: don't risk more than 20% on the initial position, only trade key opportunities, keep the liquidation line sufficiently far, and hold onto profits once gained. No greed. Is this method slow? Yes. But in the end, when the account doubles, you might find it hard to believe.

Turning $5,000 into $140,000 in three months sounds like a fairy tale, but every step is based on a replicable logic. No special talent required—just discipline.
ZEC-1,84%
XRP-0,48%
UNI-0,83%
BTC-0,19%
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GateUser-c799715cvip
· 01-09 06:54
That's right, survival comes first and foremost.
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FudVaccinatorvip
· 01-07 06:13
Another story of "discipline leads to wealth" sounds pretty impressive.
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PessimisticOraclevip
· 01-06 07:27
To be honest, this set of theories sounds reasonable, but how many people can truly stick to it? I've seen too many people say they want to control risk, but when there's a limit-up, they go all-in with their entire position. Discipline is easy to talk about but hard to practice.
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mev_me_maybevip
· 01-06 07:23
Honestly, I've been using this method for a long time, the key is to hold back. --- It's easy to say "not greedy," but if I really made 5,000 turn into 140,000, I might not be able to resist going all in. --- "Prioritize saving your life over risking it," I've heard this more than ten times, but there are few who can stay calm after a sudden spike. --- After two weeks of sideways trading, I was itching to cut losses. Watching this, I feel I need to reflect. --- A 20% initial position might seem conservative, but it feels like those who survive till the end do it this way. --- Is it true that in three months, 28 times the return? What's his current account balance, is he still trading? --- Discipline has killed 99% of traders, and I am that 99%. --- Setting the liquidation buffer at 10% is a brilliant detail; most people simply can't think of this step. --- Earning slowly is definitely more comfortable than quickly getting wiped out, but why do most people still want to gamble?
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LiquidityOraclevip
· 01-06 07:22
To be honest, this set of theories sounds reasonable, but very few people can actually implement them. Most people can't stand sideways trading for more than two weeks.
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MEVHunterBearishvip
· 01-06 07:21
To be honest, I just can't do it haha It's really just that I can't get past the greed. Seeing others go all-in and multiply tenfold makes me feel incredibly itchy inside.
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SatoshiNotNakamotovip
· 01-06 07:20
To be honest, I've seen this routine so many times that I'm bored with it. The key is still execution. Here, nine and a half out of ten people forget after reading it.
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SmartMoneyWalletvip
· 01-06 07:12
It's the same story of the "steady accumulation method" again... On-chain data doesn't support it. Can the fund flow of this account match up?
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