“How to roll over 1000U? Don't guess, just follow this rhythm!”
Every day someone asks: “Sister, can I roll over 1000U?”
I have just one answer: Yes, but you have to follow the steps.
Rolling over is not gambling, nor is it relying on luck for a critical hit.
It’s about rhythm + position control + execution, slowly rolling it out.
Let’s take 1000U as a practical example:
Step 1: Don’t go all in right away!
For a new account just starting out, only use 200-300U to test the waters,
no more than 500U at most.
First ensure: no explosion, no drawdown over 20%.
Keep the account alive first, then you qualify to talk about rolling over.
Step 2: Only trade what you understand!
There should be support and resistance,
there should be a trend direction,
and there should be controllable stop-loss + a risk-reward ratio of 2:1 or more.
In simple terms, the initial goal is just one:
“Make a trade, keep a trade.”
Step 3: Set stop-losses in advance, never cancel them last minute!
Control single trade losses within 5%-7%,
which means, for a 1000U account, a single trade can lose at most 50-70U.
It’s not being conservative; it’s the only way you can survive longer.
Step 4: Don’t be greedy with take profits; if you can take some, take some!
Small rhythm: run away with 30-50 points.
Big rhythm: charge with 80-150 points.
Lock in profits whenever there’s room; don’t dream.
Step 5: After doubling, increase your position but control the rhythm!
Once the account reaches 3000U,
use 800-1000U for each trade.
Risk control should drop to a maximum loss of 3%-5% each time,
with a drawdown not exceeding 15%, ensuring stable profits.
Step 6: After doubling, withdraw some money first!
Once you reach 3000U, withdraw 500U,
secure your profits, keep a stable mindset, and don’t fear future market fluctuations.
In summary, one sentence: small positions seek stability, medium positions accelerate, large positions protect capital.
If you really want to take this seriously, follow this method and roll for 30 days in real trading. You won’t need to ask others about rolling over; just look at your account curve and you’ll understand.