I have brought many brothers in the group, but only A-Rang's 3000U absolute reversal impressed me the most.
Half a year ago, he lost everything in one night, 300,000 including principal and interest, and all that was left in his wallet was: Bro, is there still hope?
I said yes, but it has to follow my "three military rules," one wrong step and you're out of the group.
First rule, only eat the spikes.
In the 30 seconds of BTC's sharp rise and fall, liquidity is the worst, and the market makers love to create spikes.
I used a script to mark EMA20 for him, and when it retraced properly, he entered with 5x leverage, made 5%, and immediately closed the position, without adding to the position or watching the market.
In the last two weeks, he only made two trades a day, rolling 3000U to 6200U, and during one internet outage, he resisted moving, which counted as a real start.
Second rule, altcoins within 10 minutes of opening.
New coins have thin depth at launch, with a starting difference of 3% between buy and sell.
I let him place ladder buy orders 1.5% lower than the current price in the first 5 minutes, and after the transaction, immediately place sell orders 3% higher to make a profit.
A-Rang tried AXL for the first time, making 7% in 15 minutes, trembling and asking if he could add to his position; I only replied with two words: Withdraw.
Third rule, also a lifeline—mandatory withdrawal of profits at 8 PM daily.
After the account exceeds 20,000U, regardless of how much floating profit there is, withdraw 50% to a cold wallet.
A-Rang won five nights in a row, and on the sixth night wanted to "bet one more time," and I scolded him over the phone: Do you want to experience 300,000 going to zero again?
That night he withdrew as usual, and as a result, in the middle of the night, there was a Luna-level cascading liquidation, and the group was in mourning, but he survived.
Three weeks later, A-Rang's cold wallet held 150,000U, and only 1000U margin was left on the exchange.
He said the most exhilarating thing was not making back the loss, but for the first time experiencing "being able to afford to lose"—
being brave enough to turn off the computer during a winning streak, being bold enough to withdraw during FOMO, and saving the last bullet for himself.
Before leaving, he changed the group name to "3000U Death Squad," with only one remark:
The truly expensive tuition is not losing 300,000, but not learning how to turn 3000U around. @小花生说币