After losing 1 million, I used 50,000 to roll back to the poker table's real path
The most painful thing in the crypto world is not the liquidation, but realizing after the liquidation that you never understood the rules of the game.
The consecutive crashes of LUNA and FTX last year evaporated seven figures from my account, and it wasn't until I was up all night eating instant noodles at a 7-Eleven in Bangkok that I came to understand a counterintuitive truth: big funds die from averaging down, small funds die from frequent trading.
(1) The life and death line of rolling 50,000
1. Only choose assets with "high volatility + high consensus" (for example, in critical moments for BTC/ETH at the weekly level, I caught it three times during that wave in October 2023)
2. Use USDT as ammo, never open perpetual contracts more than 1.5 times (a life-saving rule learned after blowing up 8 times)
3. Withdraw the principal immediately when profits exceed 50% (the essence of rolling is to use profits to gamble for more profits)
(2) Rolling timing that 90% of people don't know
24 hours before the Federal Reserve FOMC meeting (volatility increases by 5 times)
When there is unusual activity from CEX whale addresses (on-chain data is 6 hours ahead of candlestick charts)
When the total liquidation volume across the network reaches 200% of the monthly average (the best time for a counter-snipe)
With this strategy, I entered PEPE at 0.0000085, withdrew my principal at 0.000012, and profited up to 0.0000195. How to determine the starting point specifically? There is a way to monitor smart money on-chain.
Key reminder: Rolling from 50,000 to 1 million requires 7 doublings, but most people die on the second time. What truly determines victory or defeat is knowing when to stand aside. I now only watch the market for 17 minutes a day; what do I do with the rest of my time?
If you're feeling lost in your current trading, come to me for answers!