1. Why do most people get liquidated?

It's not about losing intelligence, but rather succumbing to these three factors:

Chasing highs and cutting losses: Always trying to catch every fluctuation, only to have profits consumed by fees and slippage; Emotional averaging down: Unwilling to accept losses, frantically increasing positions to average down, ultimately running out of funds; Refusal to cut losses: Always fantasizing that 'it will come back if I wait a bit longer,' ultimately turning small losses into total liquidation.

I was once deeply entrenched in this until I completely rewrote my strategy.

2. Turning Point: Only take 'high win-rate opportunities'

Set three ironclad rules for yourself:

Only fight key battles: No guessing tops or bottoms, only take breakouts or pullbacks after trend confirmation; Only increase position on floating profits: Never average down during losses, only let profits run; Stop loss is like life: No single loss should exceed 2% of the principal, and cut losses unconditionally when it hits the point.

It sounds simple, but execution feels counterintuitive— the market will constantly tempt you with 'false breakouts' and 'small rebounds' to break your rules.

3. Fan Case Study: From 5000U to 100,000U turnaround

Last year, a fan approached me, having seen his account drop from 30,000U to just 5,000U. He had been trading over ten times a day, heavily leveraging positions, and had been liquidated three times. I told him to do two things:

80% of the time stay out of the market: Just observe, do not trade; 20% of the time take action: Enter the market when the MACD golden cross + Bollinger Bands contraction + increased volume all overlap.

Three months later, with two precise operations, he brought his account back to 30,000U; six months later, seizing the AI narrative track and BTC breakout, he reached 100,000U.

4. Trading is a game of probabilities, not a casino

Real traders understand:

Opportunities are to be waited for: The market won't give you a 'sure win' every day; learning to wait is more important than blindly jumping in; Losses are costs: Accepting small losses can help avoid larger ones; Compound interest is key: Small profits + small losses = long-term profitability.

If you are still caught in the cycle of 'liquidation - averaging down - liquidation again,' try these three changes:

Reduce trading frequency: Only make 3-5 trades a month; Strictly enforce stop losses: Cut losses at 2%, never drag it out; Let profits run: At least hold on to 30% of profits when in the green, don’t get scared off by small fluctuations.

Follow me @加密大师兄888 Many souls lost on the crypto path, I only guide those destined to be, currently accepting disciples...