With 5000U playing contracts, do you still want to achieve the momentum of making millions? Don’t laugh, there are indeed people who have done it.

Last year, a guy, who had just entered the circle not long ago, complained to me: with only 5000U, he was afraid of getting liquidated, afraid of heavy positions, and worried about going back to square one overnight.

I replied to him directly: First learn to survive, then you will have the right to turn things around.

He followed my advice and divided the money into three parts:

First part: Set low leverage on trending coins, like BTC and Ethereum, which have strong long-term support. Use 3-5x leverage to slowly accumulate, stay still, and wait for the market cycle to harvest.

Second part: Flexible positions, specifically taking action during moments of emotional collapse—buying at the second lowest point after a sharp drop. At this time, the market is most panicked, stop-loss orders are dense, and it’s the best time to pick up chips.

Third part: Don't touch it at all; keep the “revival coins” for recovering after a liquidation. This is not superstition; it’s a trump card for position management. Without this reserve, the mindset can quickly blow up.

He was very precise with his stop-loss; it wasn’t just setting a random technical level. Instead, he monitored the exchange's liquidation heatmap, hiding stop-losses in places unreachable by the main players to avoid countless stop-loss hunts.

As for profits? Every time the account's profit exceeded 50%, he would directly withdraw 30% of the profits and convert them into stablecoins, leaving 70% to continue rolling. Securing profits and preventing emotional decisions required a firm hand.

He also chose specific times to monitor the market—between 2-5 AM is a liquidity trap during the shift change of European and American institutions, often resulting in false breakouts and false spikes; also, the half hour before major data releases like CPI and non-farm payrolls usually sees the largest intraday volatility. Other times? He would turn off the computer and sleep, saying he didn’t want to die from “itchy hands syndrome.”

The most ruthless move was reverse hedging—when the entire network was heavily long, he would open a 0.5x reverse position on another platform, laying mines for others to step on, profiting from the “fuel from long position liquidations,” which was incredibly stable.

Three months later, 5000U had turned into 190,000U.

It wasn’t luck; it was method + rhythm + position management that made it happen.

Most people fail in the market not because the market is bad, but because they lack methods and discipline. The market doesn’t lose; it only gives money to those who execute properly.