My friend only has 2700 USDT and wants to turn it around. I gave him the three most practical trading rules. After three months, his account grew to 50,000 with zero liquidation throughout. This method may seem simple, but in reality, it treats trading as a game of probability rather than gambling.
First is the three-part capital allocation method, which is the foundation for survival. Divide the principal into three parts, each 900 USDT, serving different roles—short-term quick trades (max two trades per day, then stop), trend trading (wait for weekly charts to show a bullish pattern before acting), and emergency re-entries (only sniper during extreme dips). It looks diversified, but actually it uses different rhythms to adapt to the market, rather than putting all eggs in one basket.
Second, only eat the meat of trend movements. If the moving averages haven't formed a bullish pattern? Then decisively stay out of the market and watch the show, don't follow the trend to gamble on rebounds. A volume breakout above the previous high is a signal to test the waters, not a reason to chase highs. The most critical point is to take half of the profits once they exceed 30%, so even if a reversal occurs later, the principal and profits are protected.
The third rule is strict mechanical execution. Stop-loss is fixed at 3%, cut immediately when hit, don't hesitate for even a minute. When profits reach 10%, move the stop-loss to the break-even point to protect gains. Shut down the trading platform promptly at midnight—those wild coins' nighttime volatility has nothing to do with you.
In plain terms, liquidation is like losing a finger—you can't turn back. The goal of trading isn't to get rich overnight but to survive steadily through each cycle. As long as the principal remains, opportunities will always be there. This is the way to survive the longest amid volatility.
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MissedAirdropAgain
· 01-09 07:28
The three-part method sounds good, but how many people can really stick to it? I think the key is attitude—if others can turn 2,700 into 50,000, you can too, it all depends on whether you can stay up until midnight.
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SudoRm-RfWallet/
· 01-08 04:29
The three-part method sounds good, but can you really stick to it in practice? I always find myself unable to resist going all in.
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FlashLoanKing
· 01-07 10:59
The three-part method sounds good, but how many people can actually stick to mechanically executing stop-loss? Most people get wiped out at that 3%.
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MerkleDreamer
· 01-07 10:29
Ah, this three-part method is indeed awesome, and the key is that it really allows you to survive. I used to be the greedy type, going all-in with a single bet, only to be wiped out by a nighttime riot. Now I can't help but agree with the 3% stop-loss rule. The question is, how many can actually stick to it...
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APY追逐者
· 01-06 08:46
The three-minute capital method sounds good, but there are very few who can stick to it until the end. Mindset is the hardest part.
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LiquidationTherapist
· 01-06 08:43
The three-part method can indeed help you live longer, but most people can't stick to it for even three days.
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Ser_Liquidated
· 01-06 08:41
The three-phase approach sounds good, but the key is whether you can get through the frustrating first two months.
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MiningDisasterSurvivor
· 01-06 08:40
I've experienced the 2018 mining crisis wave, and hearing this explanation... it's a bit too idealistic. Five thousand in three months? Where in the market is there such a cooperative trend? That would require hitting a bull market window.
However, I have to admit that the three-part capital method is still correct; just don't expect to run away with 30%—if the market doesn't reach full saturation, it's all in vain.
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ponzi_poet
· 01-06 08:31
The three-part method sounds good, but going from 2,700 to 50,000 isn't that simple... it really depends on whether it's a bull or bear market.
My friend only has 2700 USDT and wants to turn it around. I gave him the three most practical trading rules. After three months, his account grew to 50,000 with zero liquidation throughout. This method may seem simple, but in reality, it treats trading as a game of probability rather than gambling.
First is the three-part capital allocation method, which is the foundation for survival. Divide the principal into three parts, each 900 USDT, serving different roles—short-term quick trades (max two trades per day, then stop), trend trading (wait for weekly charts to show a bullish pattern before acting), and emergency re-entries (only sniper during extreme dips). It looks diversified, but actually it uses different rhythms to adapt to the market, rather than putting all eggs in one basket.
Second, only eat the meat of trend movements. If the moving averages haven't formed a bullish pattern? Then decisively stay out of the market and watch the show, don't follow the trend to gamble on rebounds. A volume breakout above the previous high is a signal to test the waters, not a reason to chase highs. The most critical point is to take half of the profits once they exceed 30%, so even if a reversal occurs later, the principal and profits are protected.
The third rule is strict mechanical execution. Stop-loss is fixed at 3%, cut immediately when hit, don't hesitate for even a minute. When profits reach 10%, move the stop-loss to the break-even point to protect gains. Shut down the trading platform promptly at midnight—those wild coins' nighttime volatility has nothing to do with you.
In plain terms, liquidation is like losing a finger—you can't turn back. The goal of trading isn't to get rich overnight but to survive steadily through each cycle. As long as the principal remains, opportunities will always be there. This is the way to survive the longest amid volatility.