You're not getting liquidated; you simply don't understand how to trade contracts.
To be honest, 99% of liquidations in the cryptocurrency world aren't due to bad luck, but rather to a fundamentally incorrect rolling method. I've seen countless people:
Holding on after a dip, buying back after another, and then asking, "What happened?" after a liquidation.
Running away after a surge, they feel like they've found a treasure with a 10% profit, only to look back and realize they've missed out on the entire market.
The funniest thing is, even if you've predicted the right direction, you can still be wiped out by a 5% pullback.
Isn't that outrageous?
There's only one truth: You don't understand what "true rolling" means.
Rolling isn't about desperately adding to your position; it's about using "profit to compound profit"!
How do experts play it? In three words: do the opposite!
While others are covering losses and closing out gains, he uses his profits to increase his position. The harder the market falls, the deeper the losses, yet he remains more stable.
Let me share a practical trading strategy (remember this):
Suppose you have 10,000 U units of capital and believe BTC is about to fall.
Step 1: Test your position.
Open with only 500 U units and set a stop-loss. If the market doesn't move, sell immediately.
Step 2: Roll your profits.
When profits reach 50%, don't use your principal to increase your position; use your "earnings" to continue increasing your position.
If the market takes the next step, roll it up to the next level. Every step is based on "market money."
Step 3: Hedge your floating profits. Even when the market is volatile, lock in your profits to protect them.
If you encounter a real crash, use your ghost position to chase the losses.
Throughout the entire process, your principal remained untouched, yet your profits continued to roll in.
On my last trade, I used this strategy and capitalized on a 30% rally, turning 10,000 units into nearly 50,000 units.
So, ultimately, you think experts are skilled traders, but they simply know how to find certainty amidst uncertainty.
For most people, contracts are like playing cards, relying entirely on intuition.
But true players rely on rhythm, discipline, and logic.
The market is a cure-all for any kind of dissatisfaction and rewards those with a true system.
Still hoping to turn things around by going all-in?
Get rid of your "gambler's mentality" first!