Many people see account screenshots — in three months, a principal of 6,000 has grown to 58,000 — and their first reaction is that something fishy is going on. Actually, it’s not that mysterious; it’s the result of two simple methodologies: "Iron Discipline + Compound Growth." If you want to survive long-term in the crypto market, the core secret is: operate against human nature.
Here I share a set of practical logic, whose value lies in execution, not in theory itself.
**Three-Part Capital Allocation: Keep Your Principal Always Alive**
Stories of going all-in and losing everything are too common — half of the funds lost in a day, a half-year’s salary gone. When the principal hits zero, there’s truly no chance to turn things around.
The practical approach is to divide the account into three parts:
Daily Trading Portion (1/3): At most one trade per day, aiming for a 3-5% profit before closing. This part aligns with daily expenses, pursuing stable cash flow, not gambling on market movements.
Cycle Swing Portion (1/3): Trade once every half month, only entering when a breakout signal is confirmed. If no clear signal appears, rest. This money aligns with travel budgets, earning low-frequency but high-quality returns.
Underlying Security Portion (1/3): Never touch regardless of market conditions. No matter how large the drawdown, keep this part — it’s the last line of defense for the account and the chip for turning things around.
The golden rule is: surviving is more important than making money. Capital preservation is the top priority.
**The Market Only Offers 20% of the Time Worth Trading**
80% of trading days in this market are characterized by low volatility oscillations, and genuine profit opportunities occur in no more than one-fifth of those days. Many traders monitor the charts daily and trade frequently, but the result is constantly paying transaction fees, becoming more亏损 the busier they are.
Experts’ daily state is actually quite boring — most of the time spent waiting. Waiting for that breakout moment, waiting for technical confirmation signals. If there are no signals, put down the phone. This kind of "laziness" is precisely a common trait among traders who last the longest.
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MemeTokenGenius
· 01-09 12:58
Basically, it's about stop-loss and patience. Most people die because of greed.
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MetaverseLandlady
· 01-09 11:44
There's nothing wrong with that; the key is to have discipline. Most people fail due to frequent trading.
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DAOdreamer
· 01-07 18:49
Really speaking, I've seen too many people go all-in and lose everything overnight... I need to try this three-part method.
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MemeEchoer
· 01-06 13:51
That's right, that's the point. Not moving the core position is true; I didn't hold this line before, and a single market move wiped me out completely.
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AlwaysMissingTops
· 01-06 13:46
It's the same story again... Easy to say, hard to do. How many can truly stick to a third position? As soon as the market moves, they can't hold on.
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AirdropHunterXiao
· 01-06 13:46
To be honest, I've been using the three-part position strategy for a while now, but the key is to resist the urge to act.
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OnchainDetectiveBing
· 01-06 13:43
Damn, I've been using this 3-part position logic for a while, but execution is really tough. There's too much talk and not enough action.
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TheMemefather
· 01-06 13:42
Listening to this, I can't help but think of my friend who always goes all-in with his entire position... He's still chatting in the group now.
This part of going against human nature is indeed difficult; most people are still greedier than they should be.
The idea of using only a third of your position... sounds easy to say, but actually doing it is a whole different matter.
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LiquidityOracle
· 01-06 13:38
Honestly, I’ve already used one-third of this set, but the key is really to resist not moving.
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Another theory that prioritizes capital preservation—it's all about who can survive until the end.
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The 80/20 rule is the same in every market, but truly, the few who can put down their phones when there’s no signal are rare.
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Regarding the underlying safety deposit, I want to ask, when the market surges wildly, do you really not move it?
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It looks simple, but executing it is hell. I bet five bucks most people can’t stick to it for a week.
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The most difficult part is being anti-human nature; everything else is just nonsense.
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I broke my discipline after waiting three months with no signal, so I still need to find something to do, or my mind won’t be able to handle it.
Many people see account screenshots — in three months, a principal of 6,000 has grown to 58,000 — and their first reaction is that something fishy is going on. Actually, it’s not that mysterious; it’s the result of two simple methodologies: "Iron Discipline + Compound Growth." If you want to survive long-term in the crypto market, the core secret is: operate against human nature.
Here I share a set of practical logic, whose value lies in execution, not in theory itself.
**Three-Part Capital Allocation: Keep Your Principal Always Alive**
Stories of going all-in and losing everything are too common — half of the funds lost in a day, a half-year’s salary gone. When the principal hits zero, there’s truly no chance to turn things around.
The practical approach is to divide the account into three parts:
Daily Trading Portion (1/3): At most one trade per day, aiming for a 3-5% profit before closing. This part aligns with daily expenses, pursuing stable cash flow, not gambling on market movements.
Cycle Swing Portion (1/3): Trade once every half month, only entering when a breakout signal is confirmed. If no clear signal appears, rest. This money aligns with travel budgets, earning low-frequency but high-quality returns.
Underlying Security Portion (1/3): Never touch regardless of market conditions. No matter how large the drawdown, keep this part — it’s the last line of defense for the account and the chip for turning things around.
The golden rule is: surviving is more important than making money. Capital preservation is the top priority.
**The Market Only Offers 20% of the Time Worth Trading**
80% of trading days in this market are characterized by low volatility oscillations, and genuine profit opportunities occur in no more than one-fifth of those days. Many traders monitor the charts daily and trade frequently, but the result is constantly paying transaction fees, becoming more亏损 the busier they are.
Experts’ daily state is actually quite boring — most of the time spent waiting. Waiting for that breakout moment, waiting for technical confirmation signals. If there are no signals, put down the phone. This kind of "laziness" is precisely a common trait among traders who last the longest.