When I mentioned 100x leverage, people around me looked at me like I was crazy: "Is this guy trying to lose even his underwear?"
But I have to say, my $110,000 account was indeed built up through this "crazy operation."
I'm not encouraging you to go for 100x; it's just that you don't understand: leverage itself isn't scary; what's scary is when you jump around with high leverage recklessly.
Back in the day, my account was rubbed on the ground by the market five times, blown up to the point of questioning life, and friends advised me: "Stop it, brother; this place is tougher than a casino!"
But I didn't listen. I figured: it's not the market that crushed me; it's clearly my own rhythm that was as off as an out-of-tune song.
So I dug through high-leverage crash scenes and found that the problem for those who blew up wasn't the leverage itself; it was all about a chaotic direction + random position stacking + a mindset that collapsed first.
So I did the opposite:
Every day, I stubbornly focused on one direction without wavering, and every time I acted, I would only risk 3% of my principal as bullets, never holding positions to add more; once I saw a good opportunity, I would go for 100x leverage — sounds crazy, but it's actually quite stable.
Did I lose? Of course, I've lost! But the most I've lost at one time was one or two hundred dollars, like losing a strand of hair; why panic?
The key is to catch the right wave, and the profits ran faster than a rabbit; once I made a profit, I immediately locked in the position. With this "stable, accurate, and fierce" tactic, I pulled myself out of the mud.
Now I only take two or three trades a day, sipping tea and watching the market, feeling as comfortable as a retired old man. I don't guess, I don't get greedy, I don't act impulsively; I focus on a Zen-like approach to making money.
It's not about showing off skills; there's rhythm and logic hidden in this. But I'm too lazy to explain it in detail — explaining it would be pointless; 99% of people won't grasp it and will blindly copy it, leading to a crash.
To be honest, blowing up isn't embarrassing; what's embarrassing is always being fully invested and gambling recklessly while stubbornly insisting, "This time I'll definitely turn it around." What the market fears most isn't impulsiveness, but being both inexperienced and stubborn, insisting on using the wrong methods.
Whether you take this in or not is up to you; anyway, I've already stepped onto leverage and am sunbathing~ Follow @钱包守护者 , and next time I'll teach you how to make leverage a tool, not a bomb!