#BTC Rolling over the warehouse, will you either get rich or lose everything?
In the past two years, I rolled a capital of 12,000 to 970,000 in just 4 months.
This is not luck, but a set of anti-human slaughter strategies.
Today, I will show you the core logic.
Opening time = waiting for the moment when 'blood flows like a river'.
90% of people die when 'opening positions in sideways markets' — the real opportunity comes after the massacre!
My sniper conditions:
15-minute K-line shows 3 consecutive divergences (bull-bear strength exhausted)
The liquidation leaderboard long-short ratio ≥ 3:1 (one side has been completely slaughtered)
Set stop loss 5% below the 'liquidation pile' (let others' liquidation orders block the knife for you)
If the liquidation pile is at 1.0U, I set my stop loss at 0.95U — does the dealer want to kill me? First, they should kill all the stop-loss retail investors!
Third trick: the core of rolling over the warehouse — profit addition is 100 times more important than opening positions.
Initial position no more than 5% (with a capital of 10,000, the first order is only 500).
But! After a profit of 20%, switch to 'vampire mode':
Second position = 180% of the first position (after earning 2,000, add 3,600).
Third position = 150% of the second position (after earning 5,000, add 7,500).
Never average down on losing positions! (In 2024, 87% of retail investors who got liquidated died on this principle.)
Cut losses, add positions on profit — your greed is the dealer's bullets!
The final 'life and death multiple-choice question':
Your position has made a profit of 150%, suddenly:
The exchange crashes the market.
But it hasn't touched your stop loss.
At this point, you should:
A. Immediately take a profit of 50%, secure the gains.
B. Reverse and add 200% to force the dealer to cover.
C. Turn off the machine and sleep, waiting for the market's judgment.
Bull markets don't wait for anyone; temporarily relying on luck can easily lead to pitfalls. Instead of stumbling around in the dark trying to find out yourself, it’s better to find someone familiar with the market rhythm to guide you.