From 800U to 50,000U, what I rely on is position control + luck!
Someone asked me, in the crypto world, is flipping accounts based on skill or luck?
I said—both are necessary.
Without a strategy, even luck won't help you hold on; without luck, a strategy will just lead you to take more detours.
My most classic account flip was last year when I turned 800U into 50,000U.
It seemed steady throughout, but there were moments that made my legs weak—
Once, I went long on Bitcoin, and the market suddenly crashed, stopping just 0.5 dollars short of my stop loss; as a result, the main force hit the brakes, directly crushing the shorts, and I added more positions to ride the entire wave of surge, making three times the profit on that trade.
That was luck.
But more often, I rely on a boringly rigid position strategy:
The capital is divided into six parts, the first trade always uses one part, and I gradually increase my position only if the market moves in my favor.
Each trade has a clear stop loss point, and I will never let the loss exceed 5% of the capital.
Profit rolling: only use profit to bet on the next trade, even if I blow up, it won't hurt the capital.
Luck helped me through the most dangerous moments, and strategy prevented me from going back to square one.
Flipping accounts is not about always winning, but about making big profits at the right opportunities and small losses at the wrong times.
Some of my followers have similar stories.
A night shift driver, with only 1000U left in his account, followed me for two weeks, seized a sudden surge in the early morning, and flipped it to 15,000U in one go.
He said it was the first time in his life he felt that his 'luck had come.'
I said:
Luck cannot be grasped, but the model can be replicated.
Don't struggle alone; the market is there every day, but those who can seize it are not just the bold, but also those who know how to protect their capital.
Want to have a strategy to safeguard you, and luck to boost you like me?
Keep up with my rhythm, and watch how I help you turn the tide and reach the shore.