Liquidation is not bad luck; it's because you don't understand 'real rolling positions' at all.

I've seen too many people trade contracts:

They rush to close positions when the price rises by 10%, missing out on a million-dollar market.

They desperately add positions during a crash, resulting in a complete wipeout.

They clearly have the right direction, but they get shaken out due to a mere 5% pullback.

How do experts play? Simply put, they do the opposite!

90% of people have a serious misunderstanding of rolling positions.

They think rolling positions mean adding to floating profits, going all in, fantasizing about getting rich overnight.

What’s the result? A single pullback and they go straight to zero.

The essence of real rolling positions boils down to three sentences:

Capital is always safe.

Adding positions must break through key levels.

Only profits are allowed to roll in.

Ordinary people: Bottom fishing → Adding positions → Liquidation.

Experts: Testing → Rolling positions → Locking in profits.

Let me give you a practical example:

Suppose you have 10,000 USDT in capital and encounter a major drop in Bitcoin.

Step one, use only 500 USDT to open a position, with 100x leverage that's a 50,000 USDT position, and set a stop loss firmly at the opening position + 2%. Test the waters, don’t rush in.

If the market moves favorably? After reaching half of the profit, use the profits to add positions for the first time.

If the price breaks the previous low? Use 70% of the remaining profit to add a second position.

At this point, your capital remains untouched; all you’re rolling is profit.

Once the floating profit exceeds the capital, start a hedge for protection. If the market accelerates downwards, directly take a ghost position to fully capture the profit.

With 10,000 in capital, withstand a 30% drop, and end up with a profit of 49,000 USDT.

Brothers, the market specializes in treating all forms of defiance, but it always rewards those who use the right methods.