In my freshman year, I was full of passion, thinking that by getting into my favorite finance school, I could become a wolf of Wall Street. In the first month of my freshman year, I invested all of my little over 10,000 in the cryptocurrency circle. At that time, I shorted 100 fil contracts; if it dropped a little, I would close them, and if it rose back, I would open again, repeating this over 10 times, making over 500 yuan. I thought I was a trading genius, making money as easily as breathing, but that night, Fil surged by 20%, and I undoubtedly lost a lot. I remember that was my first major loss, losing 3087 yuan. Later in the semester, I continued to lose some more money and finally decided to quit the circle.
A turning point came in the second semester of my freshman year when I didn’t return to school due to the pandemic; at that time, the ceasefire in the Russia-Ukraine war was beneficial, and shib soared. Seeing that classmates who traded together before were making money, I was encouraged by one of them to start trading again. This time, I began systematically learning some cryptocurrency knowledge, such as OI, volume-price, moving averages, XYZ, 3B rules, Dow Theory, etc. After 9 months of trial and error, I finally figured out my own system for market observation and trading. I set a trading discipline where a liquidation equals a stop-loss (manual doge), and I started to be able to profit steadily. Now I just check the market every day and make a few trades whenever there’s an opportunity.
I am currently studying airdrops and plan to venture into the primary market, but the road is long, haha. Wish me luck.
If you want to seize this bull market, it’s definitely too late to learn on the fly; it’s best to have someone guide you quickly.
I mainly focus on being a lively blogger.
Teaching someone to fish is better than giving them fish.
Still the same, if you don't know how to operate in a bull market, click on my avatar, follow me for bull market spot planning, contract codes, and free sharing.
I need fans, and you need references. Guessing is not as good as following.