🤷🏻♀️ No TP, No SL — But Why? 🤷🏻♀️
People lost money, yet Waqar Zaka benefited. How? Let’s break it down like a pro:
This wasn't a random gamble — this was a strategic, calculated move. When you're trading with high leverage, setting a stop loss too close can mean instant liquidation. So instead of going with tight SLs, this was managed with a resilient battle-tested strategy.
🔒 The liquidation point was set at 113, but the actual capital reserve to support the trade lies safely in the wallet. This means the trader isn’t relying solely on the futures account — he’s got backup capital ready to respond no matter how the market moves.
📉 If the market dips to 113, that’s not a loss, it’s just a technical trigger to reposition the entry. If price jumps to 112, his next entry will hit there. If it runs to 120, he’s there too.
In short — every drop is a setup for a stronger comeback 💥
The Real Mistake? The Followers!
If a trader used low leverage, their trade might be only +10-20%, and they likely exited early — thinking it's over.
But the master trader? He's still in — waiting for the full 100–200% play.
If someone blindly used 200× leverage, there's a high chance they got liquidated when the price spiked, only to watch it reverse later.
That’s the difference: You saw liquidation. He saw calculation.
🤔 Big Question:
Why did Waqar Zaka open this trade with just $600 margin — when he holds millions?
Because that’s what smart money does.
📊 He trades on pure calculations, not emotions.
No blind buying. No random selling.
He knows exactly how much margin to risk, how much to keep, and how to re-enter at better levels if needed.
💡 Lesson?
If you only have $600 and put $500 into margin...
You're not trading — you’re gambling.
You need to learn capital allocation, risk management, and entry scaling — or stay out of high-leverage futures.
This is how pros play the game.
📉 Losses for the crowd.
📈 Strategy for the wise.