How many people rush into the contract market with just one thought in their minds: a big gamble, a villa by the sea!
What’s the result? They didn’t see the sea and got crushed on the beach first.
The truth is — contracts are not a casino, but a mathematical game. You think high leverage can turn your fortunes overnight, but the exchange's clearing system has calculated everything long ago.
Frequent trading is a chronic poison, while you believe you are "working hard to make money."
Many people feel anxious if they don’t trade in a day, as if missing a single trade means missing out on a fortune.
But data tells you: the more trades you make, the lower your win rate.
Winning 10 times might just be luck;
but losing just once can wipe out all your profits, or even your principal.
The exchanges love these "diligent" traders — you pay transaction fees, and they count the money.
Don’t understand the market and still jump in? Then you are just giving away money!
"I feel it’s going to rise, let me open a long!"
"Looks like it can’t drop anymore, let’s short it!"
What’s the result? The market didn’t follow your "feelings," but moved according to the dealer's script. Real traders only act on market conditions they can understand; fools bet on luck for direction.
Remember: there are always opportunities in the market, but your capital is only available once.
You don’t need to "catch every market movement," you just need to "catch the winning opportunities."
Many people always regret: "Oh, if I hadn’t closed the position just now, it would have doubled!"
But have you thought — if you hadn’t closed, you might have been liquidated by now.
True winners don’t rely on "fantasizing about capturing hundred-fold movements," but on stable profits, accumulating little by little.
In the contract market, 90% of people are destined to be the chaff, only 10% can make money. And those who can truly profit in the long run might only be 1%.
Do you want to continue being a "gambler," or learn to make money using math and discipline?