Did you lose money yesterday? I'm happy because someone who truly understands the market is here ❗️❗️💪🏿
I'm 30 years old and have been trading crypto for five years.
My account has nine figures, but my initial capital was only 20,000 yuan—20,000 yuan I saved up during college: working as a Taobao customer, doing fake orders, running courier services, filling apps, and doing small tasks...every penny saved.
After graduation, I never worked a day in the office and dove straight into the crypto world. The reason is simple: for ordinary people, if they can't even make it in the crypto world, they might never have another leverage option in their lifetime.
Initially, I thought BTC was too expensive, so I only traded ETH futures and altcoins. My method is crude, but effective:
1️⃣ Select the coin first, then split your position;
2️⃣ When the market is bad, cut any small losses;
3️⃣ When the market is good, add to your position with any floating profits.
Just rely on these three sentences to avoid a blowout in a bear market and take off in a bull market.
Many people ask me:
"If you were given two positions, one with a 30% profit in BTC and a 30% loss in ETH, which would you move?"
There are only four options: A. Don't move; B. Sell BTC to buy back ETH; C. Sell ETH to buy back BTC; D. Sell everything.
Based on probability, 80% of people would choose B: cash in on the BTC profit and "bottom-fish" the plummeting ETH—which sounds good, but it's actually a trap.
The market never "rises too high, then falls, falls too low"—it's always strong, and the weak get weaker.
The BTC you just sold continues to rise, while the ETH you added to your position continues to bottom out. In retrospect, it might have been better to stay put; at least you still have a profitable position.
The anti-human choice is often the optimal solution:
✅ Sell your losing ETH and add to your profitable BTC—it's emotionally difficult, but it's likely to yield the best returns.
Every time I do this, I'm called a "crazy guy," but my account doesn't lie.
💡 So, if you only have one chance, use your limited time where it counts, and don't be held hostage by paper losses.
The market doesn't reward hard work, but discipline and anti-humanity.