The robot keeps generating similar things and keeps pasting... where are the useful resources?
Crypto余辉
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Contracts can be a printing machine if played well, but a shredding machine if played poorly! The seasoned traders remind you daily not to touch contracts for a reason; who hasn’t been liquidated a few times? But honestly, those who know how to play can snowball their profits with contracts much faster than with spot trading—like neighbor Wang turning 10,000 into 6,000, while downstairs, Xiao Li grows the same capital to 80,000. The difference is one knows how to just lay low, and the other understands how to leverage profits for compounding growth. But do you want to learn from Xiao Li? First, listen to these three bitter lessons learned from liquidation: First, don’t treat contracts like a casino; operating 20 times a day will have you questioning your life over just the transaction fees. Second, don’t get carried away when you make profits, and don’t hold onto losses; greed and the unwillingness to lose are the parents of liquidation. Third, don’t max out your leverage to 125 times at every opportunity; you think you’re launching a rocket, but you’re actually riding a shared bike into a truck. My current life-saving trading method is simple: Only trade on three types of market conditions: sharp declines followed by rebounds, horizontal breakouts, and extreme panic. Maximum position size is 30%, so even if it crashes, it won’t be devastating. Spend no more than 3 hours a day watching the market; the longer you stare, the worse it gets. How to play specifically? For example, even though it’s unlikely that Bitcoin drops to $50,000: Start with 10,000 capital using 3x leverage, when it rises to $53,000, close half to lock in profits, set a stop-loss on the remaining to let profits run, and if it hits the resistance at $60,000, sell everything to cash out. Remember two life-saving numbers: Stop trading immediately for half a month if your capital loses 30%, and lock in profits if there’s a 50% drawdown. What’s the most ironic thing? Those “gods” who share their daily profits may exit the game tomorrow, while the real money-makers are quietly following the discipline of “three trades a month.” The choice is now in your hands—will you continue to be the tender shoots getting harvested, or will you learn to play this game with institutional thinking? The crypto world is not short of opportunities; what’s lacking are the smart people who hold onto their capital waiting for the right moment.
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