20,000 to 2,000,000: A Liquidation Trader's Rolling Strategy
Step 1: Treat 20,000 as 2,000,000 to Burn
Those who have lost a lot of money understand best—if you don’t dare to bet, you will always lose. But 'betting' is not about going all in; it’s about using this strategy:
Violent Rolling Formula
Only play 'life and death games': Among the top 10 coins by popularity, find coins that have dropped over 40% in the last 24 hours and have a market cap below 5 million (e.g., $SHIB rebounded 7 times after a 50% drop before going to zero)
Devil’s Position: Split 20,000 into 5 parts, each 4,000, and only open 20x contracts (cut losses immediately if it breaks support, add to positions if profit exceeds 30%)
Time Limitation: Single operation not exceeding 4 hours, prioritize between 1-3 AM (the toughest washout period)
This method could triple your money in 3 days, or it could go to zero; do not attempt if you have a fragile mindset!
Step 2: Use the 'Dealer Trap' to Counterattack
Retail investors lose money because they are always manipulated by emotions, and you need to:
Three Anti-Humanity Operations:
Liquidation Alarm: When the exchange liquidation data shows a long-short ratio > 5:1, open a position in the opposite direction (e.g., when everyone is liquidating and going long, you decisively go short)
Suicidal Stop Loss: Cut losses immediately if over 10%, but use 'trailing stop loss' to ride profits until death (I survived 5 major crashes with this trick)
Step 3: The Real Path from 20,000 to 2,000,000 (Partially Hidden)
In March this year, I used this strategy to operate a certain animal coin (temporarily referred to as $X), key points:
Week 1: 20,000 → 45,000 (Ambushing after the crash of $X, 20x long position to catch the rebound)
Week 2: 45,000 → 130,000 (Opened short after the second crash of $X)
Week 3: 130,000 → 2,100,000, the key battle involves confidential indicators
To those who want to turn the tables:
Don’t learn 'Value Investing': Those who lose money don’t have the qualification and time for long-term plays
You must be crazier: What Z family fears is not the technical players, but the reckless disciplined gamblers