A couple of days ago, a brother of mine got liquidated. He opened a long position with 10,000 USDT at 100x leverage, and during the night, Ethereum had a sharp drop, causing his account to go to zero. With red eyes, he asked me: "Is making money in this market just impossible?" #ETH #BTC #合约爆仓

I looked at the screen full of liquidation records and could only shake my head: "It's not the market's fault; you played too recklessly."

High leverage is like a drug; it feels good for a moment but destroys your life. I've seen too many tragedies:

Old Zhang mortgaged his car to trade contracts, thinking he could turn his life around with one big win, but after liquidation, his wife wanted a divorce.

A college student borrowed money online to go all in and now attends classes during the day and delivers takeout at night to pay off his debts.

Want to transform from a liquidation specialist to stable profit? Remember these three golden rules:

Capital management is essential.

With 10,000 USDT as capital? First, split it into 10 parts! Use a maximum of 1,000 USDT for each trade, leaving 9,000 USDT as your safety net.

Leverage should be like flirting, gradual and steady.

Newbies should cap at 5x, and even experienced traders shouldn't exceed 30x.

Those who flaunt 100x returns won't tell you how many times they've been liquidated.

Setting a stop-loss should be as decisive as breaking up; be quick and clean.

Set a 30% stop-loss; if you lose 30 USDT, consider it tuition.

"Holding warriors" often end up suffering terribly.

The market always has opportunities, but if you lose your capital, it's truly gone. Those who dream of getting rich quickly often end up as someone else's ATM. The ones who survive are those who know how to control risk.

Want to know how to set a stop-loss specifically? Why am I confident to enter the market during a crash? We'll discuss these insights next time...

Remember: in this market, surviving long is 100 times more important than making quick profits. Every decision you make now is paying for your future self.

If the current market situation leaves you confused, perhaps it's time to pause. The market will always be there, but your capital may not be.