#美联储恢复降息进程 I have seen too many people chase the price and sell with bearish market and get liquidated. I have a fan case for reference—starting with a principal of 1500U, it rolled to 28,000 in two months, and now the account is just over 56,000. During this period, there was indeed no occurrence of getting liquidated.
In summary, there are three actions:
Funds are divided into three parts. 500U for short-term sniper opportunities, 500U to hold for big waves, and the remaining 500U as a safety cushion; never go ALL IN.
Patience is more important than technology. When the market is sideways, just observe, and get on board when the trend really emerges. If profits exceed 20% of the principal, take 30% off the table first, don't always think about getting a full meal in one go.
Discipline is the lifeline. If you lose 2%, you must stop loss; if you gain 4%, reduce your position to lock in profits. Never add to your position to average down when in loss. Mechanically following these rules can actually help the account last longer.
Small funds are most afraid of chaos. If risk control is solid, even with a small principal, it can slowly grow. Of course, the market has risks, and these are just operating ideas, not investment advice.
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ChainSherlockGirl
· 11h ago
According to my analysis, this guy treats "being alive" as the top priority, which is more practical than any Technical Analysis.
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BearMarketBarber
· 11h ago
Well, it's that "three-position method" again, feels like I've heard it a thousand times... But to be honest, some people really have survived on this.
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The 500U safety cushion trick is okay, but it's really not enough when the market reaches its limits.
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If I had known patience was so valuable, I wouldn't have been staring at the charts every day; it sounds easy to say.
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With solid risk control, can small funds also grow? I think most people haven't done their risk management well and are still daydreaming...
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The 2% stop loss thing is something most people simply can't accomplish, especially when they are losing.
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Reducing position after a 4% gain, this mindset is indeed a hundred times better than most momentum investors.
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With little capital, the biggest fear is being overly eager for quick profits, and this point really hits the nail on the head.
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Nobody can really just wait and see in a sideways market, most people can't sit still and have to do something.
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MoonRocketman
· 11h ago
This fuel configuration plan has some substance; the core idea is not to fill all the propellants at once, but to ignite them in phases, which is the right way to go.
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LiquidationHunter
· 11h ago
Ha, it's the same old story again, the key is how many people can really stick to it.
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FOMOrektGuy
· 11h ago
The bragging sounds really good, but there are very few who can actually last until the end.
#美联储恢复降息进程 I have seen too many people chase the price and sell with bearish market and get liquidated. I have a fan case for reference—starting with a principal of 1500U, it rolled to 28,000 in two months, and now the account is just over 56,000. During this period, there was indeed no occurrence of getting liquidated.
In summary, there are three actions:
Funds are divided into three parts. 500U for short-term sniper opportunities, 500U to hold for big waves, and the remaining 500U as a safety cushion; never go ALL IN.
Patience is more important than technology. When the market is sideways, just observe, and get on board when the trend really emerges. If profits exceed 20% of the principal, take 30% off the table first, don't always think about getting a full meal in one go.
Discipline is the lifeline. If you lose 2%, you must stop loss; if you gain 4%, reduce your position to lock in profits. Never add to your position to average down when in loss. Mechanically following these rules can actually help the account last longer.
Small funds are most afraid of chaos. If risk control is solid, even with a small principal, it can slowly grow. Of course, the market has risks, and these are just operating ideas, not investment advice.