I've been trading cryptocurrencies for over ten years, from liquidation to achieving financial freedom. I support my family through trading. By 2024, my capital will have multiplied by 50 times. If it weren't for withdrawing funds twice to buy a house, it would have been 85 times.
Today, I will share my trading strategies and insights with my cryptocurrency friends.
There is a saying: standing on the shoulders of giants can save you ten years of hard work.
At the end of the article, I will also discuss the most important cryptocurrency trading methods.
To those who are lucky enough to see this and want to improve their cryptocurrency skills, be sure to read more carefully and consider saving this!

Today, I spent four hours organizing some commonly used cryptocurrency trading gems and sharing this compilation with my fellow crypto friends. I hope it helps everyone quickly solidify their foundation and continuously improve!
For newcomers entering the cryptocurrency market, mastering some practical trading skills is crucial. Below are the insights shared by a cryptocurrency winner worth over a hundred million.







Big data will not make random recommendations. If you see this post, it means you are about to be lucky. Leave a comment saying 'Fortune will turn, everything will go smoothly, and it will get better and better.' You will see the results within three months.
The biggest enemy in cryptocurrency trading is often yourself. The above experiences are lessons learned through long-term market testing, and I hope they inspire you.
If any point in this article resonates with you, please give a thumbs up to support; thank you for following. In the sea of stocks, let us walk hand in hand!
In the cryptocurrency market, there is indeed a trading strategy with a winning rate of over 90%. It is simple, practical, and suitable for everyone!
This applies whether you are trading contracts or spot trading!
Also, my personally tested method: in three years, I earned over 14 million U using this trading strategy. Monthly return rate: 155.22%!
$5000 to $100,000: A guide for small capital violent flipping in the cryptocurrency market.
"In 3 months, $5000 became $120,000."
The secret to flipping small capital is only two things: focus + compound interest.
1. Military rules that must be followed (life and death line)
1. Never go all in on a single trade (each time ≤ 20%).
2. Only trade coins with daily trading volumes > $10 million (to avoid zeroing out).
3. Mandatory liquidation at 10 PM daily (to avoid liquidation during the early morning hours).
2. The best opportunity pool for 2025.
New coin listing strategy.
Only choose the top 3 projects launched on Binance/OKX.
Intervene when the turnover rate on the first day of listing exceeds 200%.
Never average down on broken coins (case in point: June NOT surged 5 times on its first day).
Targeting leading coins for retracement.
- Accumulate positions gradually when BTC/ETH retraces by 15%.
- Use 2x leverage (up to 3x).
- Immediately stop loss if it breaks previous lows.
3. High profit three-stage operation method.
Stage 1 ($5000 → $15,000)
Focus on one coin and aim for a 3% daily swing.
- Trade a maximum of 3 times a week.
Stage 2 ($15,000 → $50,000)
Seize coins that break monthly lines (like PEOPLE in May).
- Withdraw 50% of the profits to preserve capital.
Stage 3 ($50,000 → $100,000+)
March: $5000 → $8000 (long ETH).
April: $8000 → $21,000 (targeting WIF).
May: $21,000 → $120,000 (fully capitalize on the NOT market).

How to overcome fear of loss and achieve stable investment profits?
In investing, market fluctuations are like unpredictable weather, difficult to forecast yet genuinely present. When the market rises, some may become overly excited and chase highs; when it falls, others may panic and cut losses.
In fact, what truly determines success or failure is not the market itself but the fear of loss within each of us.
When the fear of loss is too strong, it will 'cause trouble' with every fluctuation in the market, exhausting you and making you forget your original intention. This can lead you to lose sight of the real opportunities in the midst of short-term rises and falls.

In reality, these psychological fluctuations are not isolated cases but real stories happening to many investors.
Let me tell a story: After LINK consolidated for 3 months, it experienced a strong surge in November, doubling in just ten days. It rose from $13 to $27.41, and market sentiment exploded. A friend of mine had been eyeing LINK for a long time but felt there would be a lower buying opportunity, so he remained in cash, watching. Later, when LINK surged for three consecutive weeks, he couldn't sit still anymore. His fear of missing out surged, worried he would miss out on the upcoming 'bull market.' On December 8, at $27, he invested all his funds to chase high. While dreaming of doubling, tripling, or tenfold returns, he was shocked the next day when the price quickly dropped 30%, retracing to $19. He was anxious and regretful, stamping his feet: 'I should have known better than to chase!' Unable to bear the heavy losses, he impulsively chose to cut his losses and exit. Later, LINK returned to an uptrend, and as he watched the price break through $30, he kept lamenting: 'I should have held on!'
My friend's investment experience is actually a repeated scenario in the market and is also a typical manifestation of an overly strong fear of loss. The fear of loss is a mindset between the desire to gain and the fear of losing. When you have nothing, you long for it, but when you have it, you fear losing it. Therefore, market trends will affect your fear of loss.
From desire to fear to regret, his actions are not based on analysis of market trends but are entirely driven by market emotions. When the market rises, he fears missing out; when it falls, he fears losing money. The result is a loss of both time and money due to chasing highs and cutting losses.
Market fluctuations are the laws of the market, but our mindset can determine the final outcome. To overcome the fear of loss, you need to do the following three things:
First, establish an investment plan.
For example, if you set buying points and stop-loss levels through technical analysis beforehand, you wouldn't blindly chase highs and easily cut losses. Market fluctuations are the norm; it's essential to understand the essence of rises and falls: market upturns do not mean it will always go up, and downturns do not necessarily mean a collapse. Planning is not about predicting market trends, but rather about reducing the likelihood of emotional decision-making.
Secondly, let go of obsessions.
No one can always buy at the lowest point or sell at the highest point. The key to investing is to grasp the main trend, not to react to every fluctuation. Friends like mine regret not having made a profit because the later market rose, feeling like they 'lost out' when in fact, it was due to excessive expectations of returns that caused them to miss the next real opportunity. Instead of getting hung up on immediate gains and losses, it's better to start from a broader perspective, adjust your position and mindset.
Finally, learn to review and reflect.
Regardless of gains or losses, you should review and summarize your experiences, rather than falling into self-blame or complacency.
The true value of investing lies in continuous optimization, not in the success or failure of one or two trades. Every review is a form of practice and an opportunity for growth, helping us better understand our own fears of loss and avoiding repeated mistakes.
We cannot control the market's rise and fall, but we can adjust our mindset through effort. Instead of allowing fear of loss to affect us, we should transcend the constraints of loss and gain, no longer making emotional decisions based on rises and falls: when facing an uptrend, don't let greed bind your rationality; when facing a downtrend, don't let fear swallow your courage. Only then can you truly stand on the waves of a bull market, achieve great victories, and reap abundant wealth.
Everything in this world cannot escape the 80/20 rule, which is the so-called 'eight lose, one break-even, one profit.' The financial market, including the cryptocurrency market, is also like this. 20% of people hold 80% of the wealth while those who can profit from trading cryptocurrencies are ultimately a minority; the majority of players are just 'chives.'
If you are in a losing position but reluctant to accept it, unable to find the reason, and feeling confused, instead of internal conflict, why not look for the reason first? Start by clarifying a few questions to understand the rules of the cryptocurrency market. Before starting the article, let's ask you a few questions to think about.
1. Am I truly part of the 20% or the 80%?
2. What qualifications do I have to make money in this industry?
3. Who is making money in this industry?
4. Have I studied seriously? Can my knowledge surpass that of most investors?
5. Do I have the ability to think independently?
6. Is my investment strategy just to follow the calls of friends, bloggers, and KOLs?
7. In the face of market manipulation, can I remain calm in the midst of chaos?
Of course, there's no need to belittle oneself. This is a law of the world and not our fault; we cannot change it. If one day the capital market becomes a place where most people make money and a few lose, that would be strange. The market is merely a trading channel; it does not generate profits by itself. For example, Bitcoin itself does not generate profits in the process of you buying and me selling.
Making money in cryptocurrency trading is about the price differences that arise during transactions. In simple terms, if you're making money, someone else is taking your position at a high price; your gain means someone else's loss.
Suppose there are ten participants in the cryptocurrency market, each with $10.
If a few people make money and one person earns $2 from the other nine, that person has $28, and the other nine have $8. The game can continue. If the majority makes money, where nine people earn $2 from one person, the nine have $11, and the one not only loses everything but also owes $8. The game cannot continue.
When a few people make money, the market can sustain itself; when most people make money, the market will collapse.
It's like the lottery; if most people can win, the lottery company cannot continue. Only when most people lose and a few win can the lottery company keep operating.
Therefore, the cryptocurrency market will use every means to make most people lose money. How can one become part of the minority that makes money?
There are many factors that contribute to losing money in cryptocurrency trading. In summary, they can be boiled down to the following six points. As long as you go against these six points, you can become an independent thinker.
1. Severe short-term thinking.
In short, we should focus on the long term. What everyone discusses and sees is how much it has risen today and how much it will fall tomorrow... rather than what this coin will be like in six months or a year. You can look at the so-called 'big shots' in the cryptocurrency world who have achieved financial freedom; none of them made money in just three to five days; they all relied on time.
Reasonably allocate positions, primarily long-term, with medium to short-term as a supplement. If you can accurately spot short-term trend changes, follow those as well.
2. Chasing highs and cutting losses.
Chasing highs and cutting losses is a mistake almost every cryptocurrency investor makes. They see a coin surge, and the whole world is discussing it; they follow the trend and buy in. After buying, when they are stuck and incur losses of 10% or 20%, they hesitate to cut losses, waiting for the day they can break even. When it continues to drop and they face losses of 50%, 60%, or even 70%, they think the coin is not good and cut losses at the bottom.
Then, repeat this process, and there's really no good solution to the issue of chasing highs and cutting losses; it's a psychological problem.
3. Insufficient awareness.
Many people invest without thinking, simply following what others say. Today, a certain influencer says this coin is good, and they buy it right away! Tomorrow, some rumor says that coin will rise, and they buy it too... They have no idea what makes one coin good and why another will rise.
This investment approach, which avoids using one's brain, is bound to lose money. When investing, we can use others' insights as references, but we must establish our understanding first; no matter how skilled a KOL is, they first built their positions before advising you, reminding you only after they cut their losses. You are merely lifting them up.
4. An overly restless mind.
Impatience seems to have become the norm in the cryptocurrency market. Many people enter this market with the mentality of getting rich overnight, but they are not prepared for the possibility of losing everything, nor do they have the ability to become rich overnight! They buy a coin and hope it will rise immediately, double in three days, or increase tenfold in half a month. If the coin doesn't rise in two weeks, or even incurs losses, they start finding excuses for themselves, cursing the project for not managing its market value, blaming market manipulators for crashing prices, and complaining that big accounts' predictions are inaccurate.
Having seen too many stories of overnight wealth in the cryptocurrency market, and with almost every time period around me giving birth to tenfold or hundredfold coins, I subconsciously see the cryptocurrency market as a 100% winning casino, believing that as long as I buy coins, I can make money, without viewing it as a genuine financial market. Bloodshed is the essence of financial markets.
5. Not learning.
A media outlet once conducted a survey on investors' understanding of digital currency. Among 778 randomly selected digital asset investors, less than 10% could quickly and accurately describe what 'Bitcoin' is, and only 17 individuals could correctly explain what 'blockchain technology' is.
Although the sample size of this data is small, it is sufficient to illustrate the overall situation of investors in the cryptocurrency market. If you don't even know what you are investing in, where does your conviction come from? Without conviction, how can you hold onto any asset, no matter how low the price or how good the coin is?
Learning is an eternal wealth; only continuous learning can prevent you from being harvested.
6. Lacking a sound investment philosophy.
Most people do not have a complete investment plan before investing and rely entirely on intuition. This approach of following gut feelings will likely lead to significant losses when unexpected situations arise. Only by formulating a suitable investment strategy can we handle various situations, whether rising or falling, calmly. This way, we can at least maintain our mindset and avoid making wrong choices due to emotional influences.
Finally, I advise everyone not to be arrogant after making money. Suppose your ancestors' grave smokes green, and you hit a hundredfold coin. You should find ways to preserve your wealth. That is not your skill; money made by luck can be lost through skill! Stay away from those easily brainwashed, always talking about surpassing Bitcoin and the blockchain revolution, yet they don't even understand what a block is. This is a typical narrow-minded mentality; even when you tell them the truth, they will say you are lacking in understanding.
If you're looking for opportunities to delve deep into trends and accurately capture trading moments, welcome to Su Ge's 'main business'!
Daily sharing, industry techniques, market analysis, and disassembling valuable insights to help you understand ETH's volatility logic!