Since ancient times, those caught in contracts have used low leverage. Do you know why? There's a saying called "boiling frogs in warm water," because with low leverage, you don't feel much, and you'll get deeper and deeper into the trap. Then, as you hold more funds in your position, you keep adding to your position, becoming more and more trapped. The more you add, the deeper you get, and the more trapped you become. So, whether the leverage is high or low doesn't matter; what's important is whether you set a stop loss. If you don't set a stop loss, who will blow up if not you? Do you agree?



Although low leverage seems to carry less risk, it's precisely because of the relatively gentle fluctuations that people tend to relax their vigilance, just like boiling frogs in warm water—unconsciously, their positions become more and more trapped. Many people keep adding to their positions, resulting in deeper traps and ultimately heavy losses.

The core issue isn't the size of the leverage but whether you strictly follow the stop loss discipline. Regardless of high or low leverage, not setting a stop loss is like driving without a seatbelt. When extreme market conditions hit, it's easy to be eliminated by the market. Stop loss is the most important line of defense to protect your principal, allowing you to exit timely when your judgment is wrong and preserve most of your funds.

In contract trading, the key is to have a strict risk management mindset, set reasonable stop loss levels, and resolutely execute them. This is the fundamental way to survive long-term.

The essence of range trading is to predict that the price will oscillate within a certain range, making profits through high selling and low buying. But once the market breaks out of a unidirectional trend—whether upward or downward—this bidirectional order strategy faces huge risks:

Why get trapped and killed?
1. Wrong direction judgment: Long or short positions on one side will keep losing, while the opposite orders may not be executed at all, failing to form a hedge.
2. Averaging trap: Many people keep adding to losing positions to dilute costs, resulting in deeper traps and heavier positions.
3. Liquidity exhaustion: In a unidirectional trend, prices move quickly, and stop-loss orders may not be executed in time, causing slippage losses.
4. Psychological pressure: Watching losses grow continuously, leading to overconfidence and reluctance to stop loss, ultimately causing liquidation.

The correct approach should be: if you want to do range trading, you must set strict stop losses. Once the price breaks the range boundary, admit your mistake and exit promptly, rather than stubbornly holding or constantly adding to positions. At the same time, position management should be reasonable; don't over-leverage just because your leverage is low.
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