Contracts are something that 80% of people are played by the market.
Only a very small number of people can control the market rhythm.
I am one of the latter. I'm not bragging; I truly understand:
In trading contracts, it's not about direction, it's about rhythm.
Many people often ask me:
Why do I still lose even when my direction is correct?
Why do I get fully liquidated?
Why can't I hold on, and when I cut it, it takes off?
The answer is just one word: "Rhythm"
If I may add another word: "Play"
The core of my contract trading, remember these three sentences:
1️⃣ Don't average down when wrong, only add when it's going your way.
Others lose by holding positions; I win by having a sense of rhythm. Once I enter a trade and find it wrong, I don't average down, I cut losses directly. I only dare to double down when the rhythm is right.
(99% of people can't do this)
2️⃣ Only trades that come from a trend are real trades.
Messing around in a sideways market just gives gifts to others; only trades that emerge from rhythm are worth your effort in contracts. Don't just look at today's rise; you need to consider whether the underlying strength is "sustainable."
3️⃣ It's not about being fully invested to make money; it's about surviving long enough to get rich.
Listen, the market will give you a few opportunities each month; the key is that you must have chips in hand. Those who frequently go all-in usually won't have the chance to survive until they can make a profit.
Let me share a case, no need to elaborate:
This wave of ETH rose from 3000 to 3600,
I only traded three waves:
In less than a week, I turned 3300U into 2.4WU.
And you? Are you still trying to eat every wave, but being eaten by the market instead?
Don't ask me what strategy I use, and don't ask me what indicators I rely on.
Those who truly know how to trade only use indicators as references.
Those who really turn the tables rely on position control + rhythm + emotional judgment.
Too many people learn rhythm, only to make opportunities smaller.
Remember: Going all-in is the romance of the retail trader.