Many people are afraid of adding positions with floating profits, thinking that "losses will come faster during reversals"
All those who have genuinely made big money in trading, without exception, have all added positions with floating profits, it is absolutely without exception.
Why?
You are already "passively adding positions" without realizing it.
Assuming you have a principal of 1 million, with a fixed position of 50% each time.
The first transaction earns 20%, the account becomes 1.1 million;
The next 50% position is 550,000.
This is the invisible floating profit position addition! If you refuse to actively add positions, your profit ceiling will be pitifully low.
The micro logic of adding positions with floating profits is "let profits run," but the macro view is more brutal:
80% of market profits come from 20% of trends, not daring to add positions = actively giving up the main upward trend.
Fixed positions?
Even if you win all 10 trades, compound interest cannot keep up with a single trending market.
Why do most people blow up their accounts when adding positions?
It's not a strategy issue, it's an execution flaw:
Adding positions must come with stop-losses: New positions must have their own stop-loss lines, rather than relying on floating profits as a "safety cushion."
Out-of-control ratios: The initial position should not exceed 20%, and position additions should be gradual only after meeting profit targets, rejecting "All in on pullbacks."
Assuming one day you really turn 10,000 into 1 million, it must be achieved through adding positions with floating profits.
If you don't know how to operate in such a market,
you can contact @影鸽 .
I have ideas, you have execution power, and there’s still a spot.