TraderHaoGe

vip
Crypto Market Researcher
Market Analyst
Futures Trading Strategist
Eight years of trading experience at Bichuan, regularly sharing insights, updates, and professional guidance for learning.
The easiest way to lose money in crypto: chasing the "perfect strategy" every day
If you've been in crypto long enough, you'll notice that many people lose money not because they lack methods, but because they have too many methods.
Today they learn moving averages, tomorrow they study MACD, and the day after they mess around with various indicator combinations, feeling closer and closer to consistent profits—yet their accounts keep shrinking.
A while back, a friend came to me saying he had switched trading systems several times in half a year.
He started with moving averages, lost mon
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Some people turn their fortunes around with one market swing, while others trade every day but get poorer and poorer—where does the gap lie?
Many people always think they lose money because their skills aren't good enough, their news isn't fast enough, or they missed the coin that skyrocketed.
But after doing this long enough, you'll find that the market doesn't lack opportunities—it lacks people who can wait for opportunities, seize them, and hold onto profits.
I've seen many people stare at the charts for over ten hours a day, study piles of indicators, trade more and more frequently, yet th
ETH1.70%
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From 10k to 1M: The "Lazy Rolling Position" Technique (Simplified Edition)
"Holding coins for ten years is not as good as rolling positions for ten days."
#币圈
I am a post-90s office worker.
In 2021, I entered the market with a 10k U year-end bonus.
No copy trading, no staring at the charts all day, no high-frequency trading.
What I did was simple — use a set of "lazy rolling position" logic to let the funds slowly roll.
In half a year, my account reached as high as 1.03M U.
The core is just a few key points:
$USELESS
First, understand what true rolling position really means.
Many people thin
USELESS0.82%
ZAMA0.32%
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When I first entered the crypto space, many people had an illusion that making money here was easy—buy the right coin and double your money, catch one move and change your life.
But once you actually start doing it, you realize that most people lose money not because they lack technical skills, but because they step into a few pitfalls from the very start$VANRY
I once had a follower who came in with 2000U. After seeing others post their gains, he became extremely anxious, thinking that with such a small capital, he had to go all in on a big opportunity to turn things around.
As a result
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Over the years of trading futures, I increasingly feel that the ones who truly stay in the market aren't those who make money the fastest, but those who make fewer mistakes.
$YFI Many people think trading depends on market conditions, but actually it's more about discipline.
$ETH I have always stuck to a few principles, and it's exactly these that have helped me avoid many detours.
First: Be decisive about stopping losses
Admit when you're wrong, don't fantasize that the market will turn around.
Small losses are acceptable; big losses often come from being unwilling to exit.
Second: Stop after
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You can't make money not because the market is bad, but because your rhythm is always off.
Many people, every time they enter a trade, swing back and forth between wanting to win and fearing loss. If it goes up a bit, they want to earn more; if it drops a bit, they can't bear to cut losses. After a year of busy work, their capital is still going in circles.
The problem is not that there are no opportunities, but that there is no set of rules that can be consistently followed.
Many people think that with a small capital, as long as they hold on, they can turn things around. In reality, the smal
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Treat crypto trading as a job, and you'll feel much more relaxed.
In my first few years in the crypto space, I was like many others. During the day I watched the charts, at night I checked the news, and in the middle of the night I was still studying the candlesticks. When the market went up, I was afraid of missing out; when it went down, I was afraid of going to zero. I was busy as hell, but my account never grew. Later I realized: making money doesn't depend on hard work, but on discipline.
Since then, I started treating crypto trading as a job. Trade when there's an opportunity, wait when
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A while ago, a friend came to chat with me. He had about three thousand yuan and said he wanted to dip his toes into the crypto space, asking if I had any leads.
I didn't rush to teach him how to make money. Instead, I asked a very direct question: "Do you want to experience it, or do you want to gamble?"
Three thousand yuan is not a lot, but it's not a small amount either. Converted to USDT, it's about four hundred, which is actually in a pretty delicate spot — enough to practice, but not enough to mess around carelessly. Once the rhythm is off, it's easy to just blow up the account$HOT
I to
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3000 yuan to 300k yuan, it’s not luck, but these two steps.
Many people think that 3000 yuan is impossible to turn around.
But the real difficulty is not the small capital, but always thinking of achieving everything in one go.
When I first entered the crypto space, my capital was also only 3000 yuan, roughly equivalent to 500U. At that time, I also fantasized about getting rich overnight, but the first time I went all-in on a hot coin, I lost half of it in a week.
Later, I realized that if you want to grow small capital, the first goal is not to get rich, but to survive.
The first step is to
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Why is it that with the same 3,000U, some people can turn it into 30kU in a month, while others lose it down to 300U in three days?
Many people’s first reaction is that it’s a market issue, but after doing this for a while, you’ll realize the real difference isn’t the market—it’s whether they use leverage as a tool or as a gambling table.
Many people hear about a liquidation and immediately assume it’s because the leverage was too high. But that understanding is incomplete. What really causes problems is never 20x or 50x on their own—it’s high leverage + heavy position + poor risk control, all
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When you've been in the crypto space long enough, you'll increasingly realize one thing: the biggest problem for small capital is never about not being able to make money, but about being too eager to hit it big in one go.
I've seen too many people with only one or two thousand USDT, staring at skyrocketing coins every day, jumping in on a single green candle, panicking the moment there's a slight pullback, and after a few rounds of back-and-forth trading, their principal is basically worn away.
To put it bluntly, this isn't a technical issue—it's a mindset that's been led astray by the idea o
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Many people can't make big money; to put it simply, it's just one problem — as soon as they earn a little, they rush to exit.
This is especially common in the crypto world. When floating profits reach around 10%, they start to panic, fearing a pullback. At 15%, they think about locking in gains. Soon after selling, the market moves significantly higher. Then the same cycle repeats: selling too early, regretting, and doing it all over again.
Over time, the account gets stuck in an awkward position — it looks like they're always trading, but they never grow big. $BTC
The core issue isn't the ma
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TheGlamorousLifeInTh:
11111111111111111111
Why can some people trade with 100x leverage for half a year without getting liquidated, while others with 5x are gone in three days?
Many people's first reaction is that it's about luck, but after doing it for a while, you'll find it's actually not that related to luck.
Whether you get liquidated or not is already half decided the moment you place the order. What really makes the difference is not the amount of leverage, but how you manage your position.
100x sounds scary, but it's actually not that terrifying. If you only use 100U to test the trade, even if you're wrong, you only lose 100U.
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I remember when I first entered the crypto space, I had only 200U in my pocket. Back then, I fantasized that if this small amount could multiply dozens of times, I would turn my life around, right? But in the first week, I got liquidated three times, and my account was down to 80U.
Later, I realized one thing: if you don't even know how to survive, you can't talk about making money.
1. First, practice with small money, don't gamble with your life
I split the 80U into 4 portions, using only 20U each time. If you lose this trade, there's still the next one, avoiding going to zero all at on
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What we want to earn is never a single U, but the money that can stay in the market for the long term. Many people don't understand this at the beginning. They come in thinking only about doubling a single trade, but after a while, they realize that surviving longer is the key.
Let me share some practical experience gained slowly from actual trading. It's not flashy, but it's basically bought with money.
First, let's talk about making money. The biggest problem for many people is not that they can't make money, but that they don't know how to keep it. They get excited when they have a 10%
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To be honest, when I first entered the crypto space, almost no one could resist the temptation of the word "get rich quick," and I was no exception.
A while ago, a follower came to me. He started with just 1000U, saying it wasn't much, but enough to take a serious shot in the market. His problem is actually very typical: he wanted to catch a big move as soon as he entered, chasing pumps and panicking at any dip. His position sizes kept growing, and then one wave of retracement wiped out all the profits he had made over the previous months.$ARPA
He was pretty devastated when he told me, wonder
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With the same 3000U, some people build it up in months, others go to zero in days.
The difference has never been the market, but whether there is a set of rules that can be executed.
I once mentored someone who started with 3000U. The process was not fast, but it was very steady along the way, without a single liquidation.
He was able to make it in the end not because he caught many opportunities, but because he did less and did it steadily.
The first point is simple: split your capital and don't pin all your hopes on a single trade.
Some for short-term trades, some to wait for trends, some to
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The harder you try to win your money back, the more the market will clean you out.
In my early years in the circle, I saw too many people follow the same path: refuse to accept a loss, add positions to try to recover, only to get more and more anxious, and finally get knocked out in one trade.
The problem isn't the market — it's that your approach is wrong.
The essence of trading is not about emotions; it's about whether you can stick to your rules when you're losing.
Over the years, I've only done one thing: control risk.
Keep positions small, always leave an escape route;
If the
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