A person contacted me whose all 16 trades were in a loss.

The account was in cross, and total capital was $35,000.

BTC sell at 92k

  • Virtual sell at 0.9330

  • ETH sell at 1720

  • All trades were in a loss.

  • Out of total capital, only $11,000 remained, which was about to be liquidated in the next 5–6 hours because he kept adding margin repeatedly to these trades.

The total margin used was about $4,200, leverage was high, and the market turned strongly bullish.

All trades were interconnected in a cross account, making it hard to separate profits and losses.

Liquidation seemed imminent.


He said: “I’m ready to take a risk. Tell me what to do.”

I asked him: “If this account gets liquidated, is it a problem for you?”

He replied: “Not a problem. I’m already sinking. Just tell me a way forward.”

So I explained: “Don’t dollar-cost average (DCA) any of these trades. Instead, hedge all of them with the same margin within 20 minutes.

Here’s the key point:

He didn’t know how to hedge trades.

So when we hedged in the “virtual” trades, instead of reducing risk, it increased his margin further.

Then I explained again.

With great difficulty, we hedged all positions except for 1.

Checked afterwards — the account was left with $6,000.

Then the real game started.

This is a key principle in business — never fear a loss.

I explained a strategy to him — a trial-and-error or “tukka” strategy — because he didn’t know technicals.

I told him to buy more of the “virtual” every time it fell, and to sell 90% at a 30–40% rise.

Then buy again on drops.

I explained how to calculate margin each time to match the current price.

Also told him:

Once margins become equal in both trades, stop averaging in.

Then, when a dramatic drop occurs, put all your capital into buying at once, to bring your average close to the current price.

This way, when the price rebounced, nearly all trades turned profitable.

He made about $36,000 in 24 hours.

Then I told him:

“Now close all trades immediately.

And from now on, never enter more than one trade at a time.

If you get trapped again, use this method.”

But he said:

“I’m done. I’m never going to do this again — it's a very tough job!” 😂

This is a method I explained in messages to about 50 people who were stranded in trades.

But most of them were scared;

they wasted 6 hours, and due to fear, failed to execute it.

The ones who understood applied it.

Because when their business was going under, instead of freezing, they fought back.

For example:

When someone was suffering a 1 crore loss, instead of selling everything in panic,

he held his stocks and, after the market fell, bought another 7 crore worth.

Two months later, the price doubled —

and the total portfolio jumped to 30 crore.

Instead of losing 1 crore, he made 15 crore.

The moral is:

When you’re drowning, you have limited options left.

Those who avoid risk can’t do business, and those who panic are already finished.

Note:

This strategy is only for those who know how to take a risk when there’s a downturn —

those who know how to handle losses in business and when to take a bold step.$BTC

#MarketRebound