In November last year, Akai sent me a screenshot: the account only had 3200U left, with a note saying 'last belongings'. He said he had blown up his account 3 times in six months, going from 200,000 U to this point, and wanted to take one last shot.

I told him to pause for three days and explained the core of the 'cold treatment trading method': don't chase the rise, wait for a pullback, and rely on trends to make money. He asked if he could follow along, and I set three rules: no more than 30% position on a single stock, cut losses if it falls below the 20-day line, and take out half of the principal after making a profit.

At the beginning of December, he traded SOL, which pulled back from 100 dollars to 78 dollars and touched the 60-day line, with a monthly MACD golden cross. I told him to build a position with 1000U, with a stop loss at 72 dollars. Three days later, it rose to 88 dollars, and he took half off the table, netting 100U—this was his first profit in half a year.

In January, he traded LINK, which fell from 15 dollars to 11 dollars and consolidated for two weeks, with trading volume tripling. He added 1500U, and after 10 days, it shot up to 17 dollars, taking half and making 450U, almost recovering half of his principal.

In March, when BTC broke 40,000 dollars, I told him to put all his funds into ARB: after falling to 2.5 dollars for a month, it stabilized at 1.8 dollars, with a weekly bottom divergence. He invested 2000U plus previous profits, totaling just over 4000U in position.

Half a month later, ARB surged to 3.6 dollars, doubling, and he took profits in three batches: 3 dollars, 3.3 dollars, and 3.6 dollars, clearing out for a total profit of 42,000U.

In mid-May, he sent a screenshot showing 90,199U. He withdrew 50,000 U for a fixed deposit, and continued trading with the rest. A few days ago, he sent me a bottle of Moutai, saying: 'Bro, I can now tell my wife that I trade.'

In fact, out of this 90,000 U, less than 10% was from principal gains; most came from profits rolling in. Small capital turning around relies on the cycle of 'preserving principal → using profits to experiment → catching a trend to double'. Staying alive to wait for opportunities is more important than anything else.

How many people have lost hope in the fluctuations, yet managed to stabilize and even turn around with this system? Countless— but there’s one core principle: dare to follow, dare to do, and don’t drag your feet.

The layout for the next wave is already drawn out, with points, rhythm, and positions all marked clearly. Mixing with @币来财888 , no nonsense, just one principle: precise targeting, no wasted effort.

But let me be blunt: only take those with strong execution.

These are the ones who don’t curse when they fall, don’t get greedy when they rise, and can steadily execute; they know opportunities wait for no one and want to get on board right away, not waiting to kick themselves after it rises.