When the account turned from 1900U to 18,000U, only one thing was done right that most people wouldn't even dare to think about!
First, let me ask: Do you remember the last time you entered the market fully loaded?
Old Li came to me when his account only had 1900U left.
Three months ago, he lost 100,000 in futures, and both his wife and kids urged him to 'give it up', but he stubbornly refused to believe in bad luck.
I asked him a question: 'Did you lose because of the market, or because of your timing?'
He was silent for more than ten seconds and said something I will never forget:
'I was always betting on direction and never thought that 'position control + timing' could really save me.'
In the next three weeks, I only led him to make seven trades.
Not frequently, not all-in, not betting on luck.
For the first trade, he only took 200U, riding a wave of ETH's pullback to long.
He wanted to increase his position, and I said, 'Stay steady, the next wave is the key.'
In the second trade, we went against the sentiment of the entire network and went long on BTC when the market seemed most unlikely, earning a profit of 1500 dollars.
He began to trust me.
By the sixth trade, his account had surpassed 11,000U, and he couldn't help but excitedly say:
'I used to think those profit screenshots from others were all staged; it turns out there are really people who rely on 'timing + rolling positions', not luck.'
The seventh trade determined the outcome.
We split our positions and capitalized on the breakout of ETH, moving from 3000 to 3600, decisively establishing our position.
The account finally settled at 18,350U.
The whole process took less than 30 days, without any liquidation and no emotional trading.
There was no mysticism, only the two words: timing and position control.
In conclusion:
Actually, many people are not bad at trading cryptocurrencies,
They just have never followed the right person and have never systematically learned how to 'roll'.
It's not that you haven't moved fast enough, but that you've moved too chaotically.
The light has always been on; the question is whether you want to stop and take a look.