From 2000U to 89,000U: The truth behind half a year's turnover is not about luck but about following rules
"Bro, can 2000U reach 80,000U in half a year?"
Every time I receive such a question, I first counter: "Do you want to turn your situation around, or do you want to take a gamble?" Only when I hear the words "want to survive" will I nod: "Yes, but you must strictly follow the rules—don’t make emotional trades, and don’t risk your life for luck."
Last time I encountered a student with over 2100U left in his Binance futures account, and his liquidation records piled up like a small mountain, but fortunately, he hadn’t developed the bad habit of going all-in to catch the bottom. For him, I only taught the basics: small wave arbitrage, making just 1 trade a day, capping the position within 20%, targeting 3%-5% returns, and not being greedy for more.
In the first week, he made 400U, in the second week his account exceeded 10,000, and by the third week, he was floating: "Bro, can I double my trades?" I directly paused his trading for 3 days, forcing him to write a review—600 words a day, no market chatting, just writing about his emotional fluctuations, whether his execution had deviated, and how he managed to resist temptations.
After years of mentoring students, I understand too well: turnover is never about catching a few big opportunities but about the restraint to close positions according to plan every time the time is right.
Only when his account was stable at 37,000U did I teach him the "Two-Stage Mid-Line Layout + Emotional Inflection Point Strategy"—this trick I rarely share because most people can’t even manage "only making 1 trade a day," let alone the complex mid-line execution.
Six months later, he sent me a reconciliation chart: 89,300U. I told him: "Turning your situation around is not difficult; the hard part is never making the same mistakes again."
Over the years, I’ve seen too many people who can’t turn their situation around even with 5000U, all due to three words: eager to make quick money, betting that the market will go their way, and not believing that "taking it steady" can work.
I don’t have any universal secrets; mentoring students relies on "first filling in knowledge, then establishing discipline, and finally providing strategy," with no steps out of order.
If you also have 2000U and truly want to follow step by step to turn your situation around, rather than gamble, stop asking aimlessly in the square. Follow @Analyst Bao Ge, and I’ll break down the specific operational details of small wave arbitrage for you—everything from how to select targets to when to open and close positions, all practical content. $BTC $ETH


