That year, I had only 5000 U left in my account. I kept staring at the market but kept losing more. The most frustrating moment was when I lost four consecutive trades, and in the last one, I went all in chasing the rise, only to get hit hard and question my life.
After reflecting deeply, I reviewed all my trades three times and realized: it wasn't that I couldn't understand the market, but rather I had no discipline; emotional trading was what caused me to lose so badly.
From that point on, I set rules for myself: I wouldn't act on feelings but would trade based on logic. Gradually, I turned the tide and welcomed true stable profits.
The following are ten pieces of advice I summarized after repeatedly stepping on landmines:
1️⃣ A strong coin's consecutive drop is an opportunity, not a panic.
2️⃣ After two days of increase, reduce your position; greedy people will eventually give it back.
3️⃣ If a coin rises over 7% in one day, there’s still a chance for further gains the next day; wait and don’t rush to chase.
4️⃣ Don't chase a bull coin high; it's best to enter after confirming a pullback.
5️⃣ If there’s been no movement after three days of sideways trading, give it another three days; if still no movement, switch positions.
6️⃣ If you can't even return to your cost the next day, don't hesitate; just get out!
7️⃣ Price movements often have “threes” and “fives”; after “five”, watch closely for “seven”; buy on the third day and look for peaks on the fifth day.
8️⃣ Watch volume and price: high volume at low levels is an opportunity, while high volume at high levels signals it's time to exit.
9️⃣ Only trade in upward trending coins: short-term look at the 3-day line, medium-term at the 30-day line, main uptrend at the 80-day line, true bull market at the 120-day line.
🔟 Small funds wanting to win rely on these three points: the method is right, the mindset is stable, and execution is ruthless!
That year, I didn't rely on luck, but on:
✅ Not making trades without a clear pattern
✅ Not touching vague opportunities
✅ Maintaining a winning rate of over 90% for five years
Trading is not about emotional impulses; it’s a long-term game of discipline and compound interest.
May both you and I navigate through bulls and bears, steadily growing our funds!
A set of correct methods + stable execution is far stronger than blindly hustling alone! Those looking to turn things around better keep up.