People always ask me: "Can rolling over truly work? Is it just a matter of luck and betting right?"
In fact, I used to think the same way until I rolled 3000U into 46,000U and realized: this has nothing to do with gambling; it relies entirely on rules that constrain human nature, extracting profits with patience.
The core of rolling over is quite simple: use a small amount of capital as seeds, and let the account gradually grow through each compliant operation. The key is not how much you earn in one go, but whether you can achieve stable profits while keeping the capital flexible — just like installing inflow and outflow valves in a reservoir, daring to store water while being able to release floods in time.
Over the years, I’ve figured out three core rules, each one learned through hands-on pain:
1. Position with brakes: Never exceed 50% of total position; after making a profit, increase the position by no more than 30% of the current profit to protect the principal.
2. Stop-loss and take-profit like an alarm clock: Set a 3% stop-loss as soon as you open a position, with take-profit divided into two stages (5% for half, 8% for full liquidation), and execute when the time comes.
3. Adding to positions like stacking blocks: Only add to positions after making a profit, and the more profit, the more conservative the addition (for 1000U profit, add at most 200U), to avoid sudden account crashes.
Many people fear the risks of rolling over, but the biggest pitfalls are just two: using excessive leverage and failing to maintain discipline. I always keep 50% of my capital in stablecoins, so even if the market suddenly crashes, I still have money to buy the dip; I only use 2-3 times leverage, and no matter how exciting the market is, I won’t touch 10 times or more — high leverage is like putting a gas pedal in a car without brakes; it looks fast, but a mishap can lead to total destruction.
I’ve seen too many people fall into these traps: impulsively adding positions, stubbornly holding onto losses, frequent trading. Rolling over should avoid the desire for speed, much like planting crops requires waiting for the cycle.
If you want a no-risk operation, I have a simple method: only use spot profits for contracts, keeping the principal intact; lock leverage at 2 times, making the risk like building a fence — no matter how wild, it can't escape the boundary.
Rolling over has never been about getting rich overnight; it’s an opportunity for ordinary people to turn their fortunes around through discipline. Just like I earn a few hundred U every day, it seems slow, but in two months, 3000U can grow into 46,000U.
The market is never short of opportunities; what’s lacking is people who can walk slowly according to the rules. If you keep going in circles of "earning and then losing it back," consider trying to slow down — the more detailed the rules, the steadier the account grows.
If you have specific operational confusions, feel free to chat with me at @bit多多 . The pitfalls I've encountered and the methods I’ve tried might help you avoid some detours.