In 52 days, how did he roll from 5800U to 48,000U
Among the fans I mentor, there is a young man named Amu.
52 days ago, his account only had 5800U. In today's terms, it's not a huge amount, but in a world where liquidation happens easily, it was enough to wipe him out overnight.
On the first day, I gave him just one piece of advice in the group: treat your position as your life, and first learn to be slow. He followed my advice, only using 20% of his capital to follow a small trend, closing with a floating profit of 0.8%.
The numbers may seem insignificant, but it made him realize for the first time—that not losing is gaining.
On the second day, the market presented a clear bullish channel. I advised him to add his profits, increasing his position to 30%.
That evening, he sent me a screenshot: his profit broke a thousand for the first time. His hands were shaking as he typed, but he replied, "Teacher, this isn't luck, it's rhythm."
The real turning point came on the third and fourth days. The market suddenly surged, and contract fees skyrocketed.
While others shouted for a full investment, I advised him to split his position into four parts, rolling and adjusting: add when it rises by 5%, reduce when it falls by 3%.
During those two days, he operated like a machine, only taking the two parts of the fish that belonged to him, and his account grew from 10,000 to 15,000.
After the market closed, he called me, his voice hoarse: "So small funds can also create a snowball effect."
In the final sprint, he did only one thing: he wrote the word "stability" into his muscle memory.
• For every 10% profit, forcibly withdraw 20% of the profit;
• No single position should exceed 15% of total capital;
• Write a plan before the market opens, only allowed to execute during trading, no thinking allowed.
When others were envious of ten times leverage, he instead reduced it to three times. When the market went crazy, he slowed down.
After 52 days, his account settled at 48,000U, a full 8.3 times.
Amu is not a naturally gifted trader, and I have no insider information.
The one thing he did right was treating every opening as the last opportunity, leaving room no matter how good the market conditions were. Now, some people ask him: "Can we do it again?"
I posted his exact words on my social media—
"The market is alive every day, but the mindset to be slow, dare to take profits, and control positions is the rarest leverage."@小花生说币