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Why Do You Still Lose in Trading… Even When You Make the Right Decisions?First question — why do you want to do stock trading? To make money from the market… right? That means 👇 You expect returns. So naturally, the next question in your mind is: What exactly brings returns? Which setup? Which system? Which steps? And that’s exactly where the problem begins. You start thinking in this direction… and in most cases, it leads to failure. If this has happened to you, read the rest very carefully 👇 (Grab a pen and paper if you can.) 🔴 First Realization If your focus while learning trading is: “What will give me returns?” Then from my experience, your chances of success are very low. 🔥 Write This Down “Trading is not a return-first process… Trading is a risk-first process.” 🔴 What Does That Mean? Forget for a moment: All setups All indicators All technical analysis When you trade, you have only one job — 👉 Manage risk, not generate returns. Repeat this line in your mind again and again: “As a trader, my job is not to generate returns… my job is to control risk.” Read it 10 times. Write it down if needed. 🔴 What Happens If You Don’t Manage Risk? Let’s say you start trading and take a fresh position. There are only 4 possible outcomes: ✔ Big Profit ✔ Small Profit ✔ Small Loss ✔ Big Loss 🔴 Scenario 1 (No Risk Control) Trade 1: +10,000 (Big Profit) Trade 2: +5,000 (Small Profit) Trade 3: –5,000 (Small Loss) Trade 4: –25,000 (Big Loss) 👉 Final Result = –15,000 (LOSS) You got 2 trades right… yet you ended up in loss. Why? Because one big loss wiped out all your profits. 🟢 Scenario 2 (Risk Controlled) Trade 1: +10,000 Trade 2: +5,000 Trade 3: –5,000 (Small loss cut) Trade 4: –5,000 (Small loss cut) 👉 Final Result = +5,000 (PROFIT) Same trades — just avoided a big loss. 🟢 Scenario 3 (No Big Profit, Still Safe) Trade 1: +5,000 Trade 2: +5,000 Trade 3: –5,000 Trade 4: –5,000 👉 Final Result = 0 (Break-even) No big profit, no big loss — still stable. 🟠 Scenario 4 (Mostly Losses, But Controlled) Trade 1: +5,000 Trade 2: –5,000 Trade 3: –5,000 Trade 4: –5,000 👉 Final Result = –10,000 (LOSS) You lost most of the trades… Still, your total loss is smaller than Scenario 1. Why? Because there was no big loss. 🔴 The Core Truth One big loss is enough to blow up your trading account. No matter what you trade — stocks, crypto, forex, intraday, swing, or anything else… Your #1 rule should be: 👉 “I will never take a big loss.” 🔴 Final Verdict In trading, you don’t need: Big profits High accuracy You only need one thing 👇 👉 Avoid big losses 🔥 Simple Truth You can handle: ✔ Big profit ✔ Small profit ✔ Small loss ❌ But you cannot handle a big loss. 🎯 Final Message Focus on avoiding big losses today… profits will take care of themselves later. Once again 👇 “Trading is a risk-first process… not a return-first process.” 🛟 Survival First At the beginning of trading, your only goal is to survive. Don’t let your account blow up. 90% of traders lose their accounts within the first year — and their journey ends there. Think about it — when learning to swim, you don’t aim to become a champion on day one. You first learn how to keep your head above water. 💬 Your Turn Have you ever thought about trading this way? Share your experience. ------- #tradingpsychology #Discipline #stoploss #moneymanagement #RiskFirst

Why Do You Still Lose in Trading… Even When You Make the Right Decisions?

First question — why do you want to do stock trading?
To make money from the market… right?
That means 👇
You expect returns.
So naturally, the next question in your mind is:
What exactly brings returns?
Which setup? Which system? Which steps?
And that’s exactly where the problem begins.
You start thinking in this direction… and in most cases, it leads to failure.
If this has happened to you, read the rest very carefully 👇
(Grab a pen and paper if you can.)
🔴 First Realization
If your focus while learning trading is:
“What will give me returns?”
Then from my experience, your chances of success are very low.
🔥 Write This Down
“Trading is not a return-first process…
Trading is a risk-first process.”
🔴 What Does That Mean?
Forget for a moment:
All setups
All indicators
All technical analysis
When you trade, you have only one job —
👉 Manage risk, not generate returns.
Repeat this line in your mind again and again:
“As a trader, my job is not to generate returns… my job is to control risk.”
Read it 10 times. Write it down if needed.
🔴 What Happens If You Don’t Manage Risk?
Let’s say you start trading and take a fresh position.
There are only 4 possible outcomes:
✔ Big Profit
✔ Small Profit
✔ Small Loss
✔ Big Loss
🔴 Scenario 1 (No Risk Control)
Trade 1: +10,000 (Big Profit)
Trade 2: +5,000 (Small Profit)
Trade 3: –5,000 (Small Loss)
Trade 4: –25,000 (Big Loss)
👉 Final Result = –15,000 (LOSS)
You got 2 trades right… yet you ended up in loss.
Why?
Because one big loss wiped out all your profits.
🟢 Scenario 2 (Risk Controlled)
Trade 1: +10,000
Trade 2: +5,000
Trade 3: –5,000 (Small loss cut)
Trade 4: –5,000 (Small loss cut)
👉 Final Result = +5,000 (PROFIT)
Same trades — just avoided a big loss.
🟢 Scenario 3 (No Big Profit, Still Safe)
Trade 1: +5,000
Trade 2: +5,000
Trade 3: –5,000
Trade 4: –5,000
👉 Final Result = 0 (Break-even)
No big profit, no big loss — still stable.
🟠 Scenario 4 (Mostly Losses, But Controlled)
Trade 1: +5,000
Trade 2: –5,000
Trade 3: –5,000
Trade 4: –5,000
👉 Final Result = –10,000 (LOSS)
You lost most of the trades…
Still, your total loss is smaller than Scenario 1.
Why?
Because there was no big loss.
🔴 The Core Truth
One big loss is enough to blow up your trading account.
No matter what you trade —
stocks, crypto, forex, intraday, swing, or anything else…
Your #1 rule should be:
👉 “I will never take a big loss.”
🔴 Final Verdict
In trading, you don’t need:
Big profits
High accuracy
You only need one thing 👇
👉 Avoid big losses
🔥 Simple Truth
You can handle:
✔ Big profit
✔ Small profit
✔ Small loss
❌ But you cannot handle a big loss.
🎯 Final Message
Focus on avoiding big losses today…
profits will take care of themselves later.
Once again 👇
“Trading is a risk-first process… not a return-first process.”
🛟 Survival First
At the beginning of trading, your only goal is to survive.
Don’t let your account blow up.
90% of traders lose their accounts within the first year —
and their journey ends there.
Think about it —
when learning to swim, you don’t aim to become a champion on day one.
You first learn how to keep your head above water.
💬 Your Turn
Have you ever thought about trading this way?
Share your experience.
-------
#tradingpsychology
#Discipline
#stoploss
#moneymanagement
#RiskFirst
Part-1: Money Management for Forex & Crypto Traders: {spot}(BTCUSDT) {spot}(BNBUSDT) Why Money Management Comes First? Most traders spend the majority of their time searching for the "best" entry strategy. Yet data consistently shows that most retail traders fail not because of bad strategies, but because of poor risk control. They overtrade, they revenge trade, and they let emotions override their plan. In Forex and crypto, where leverage amplifies both gains and losses, the consequences of undisciplined risk management are severe. A single bad session without a stop-loss can wipe out weeks of careful gains. A trader with a 50% win-rate and a good risk-reward ratio will outperform a trader with a 70% win-rate who takes oversized positions. Survival in the market is a prerequisite to profitability. The Core Principles: ### 1 — Risk a Fixed Percentage Per Trade Never risk more than 1–3% of your total account balance on any single trade. This is called the *fixed fractional method* and it is the cornerstone of professional risk management. For example, if your account holds $2,000, your maximum risk per trade should be $20–$60. This approach ensures that even a losing streak of 10 consecutive trades does not devastate your account — it reduces it by a manageable amount, leaving you capital to recover with. ### 2 — Set a Daily Loss Limit Define a hard ceiling for what you are willing to lose in a single trading day. A common benchmark is **5–10% of your account balance.** Once that threshold is hit, your session ends — no exceptions. This rule prevents the most dangerous trading behavior: trying to "recover" losses in the same session by taking larger, more emotional trades. ### 3 — Define a Daily Profit Target Just as you protect against downside, set a realistic **daily profit target of 3–7%.** When you reach it, stop trading. Overtrading in a profitable session is one of the most common ways traders give back their gains. For educational purposes only. Trading involves significant risk of loss #TradeSmarter #TradingMindset #FinancialFreedom
Part-1: Money Management for Forex & Crypto Traders:


Why Money Management Comes First?
Most traders spend the majority of their time searching for the "best" entry strategy. Yet data consistently shows that most retail traders fail not because of bad strategies, but because of poor risk control. They overtrade, they revenge trade, and they let emotions override their plan.
In Forex and crypto, where leverage amplifies both gains and losses, the consequences of undisciplined risk management are severe. A single bad session without a stop-loss can wipe out weeks of careful gains.
A trader with a 50% win-rate and a good risk-reward ratio will outperform a trader with a 70% win-rate who takes oversized positions. Survival in the market is a prerequisite to profitability.
The Core Principles:
### 1 — Risk a Fixed Percentage Per Trade
Never risk more than 1–3% of your total account balance on any single trade. This is called the *fixed fractional method* and it is the cornerstone of professional risk management.
For example, if your account holds $2,000, your maximum risk per trade should be $20–$60. This approach ensures that even a losing streak of 10 consecutive trades does not devastate your account — it reduces it by a manageable amount, leaving you capital to recover with.
### 2 — Set a Daily Loss Limit
Define a hard ceiling for what you are willing to lose in a single trading day. A common benchmark is **5–10% of your account balance.** Once that threshold is hit, your session ends — no exceptions.
This rule prevents the most dangerous trading behavior: trying to "recover" losses in the same session by taking larger, more emotional trades.
### 3 — Define a Daily Profit Target
Just as you protect against downside, set a realistic **daily profit target of 3–7%.** When you reach it, stop trading. Overtrading in a profitable session is one of the most common ways traders give back their gains.

For educational purposes only. Trading involves significant risk of loss

#TradeSmarter #TradingMindset #FinancialFreedom
Money Management for Forex & Crypto TradersWhy Money Management Comes First? Most traders spend the majority of their time searching for the "best" entry strategy. Yet data consistently shows that most retail traders fail not because of bad strategies, but because of poor risk control. They overtrade, they revenge trade, and they let emotions override their plan. In Forex and crypto, where leverage amplifies both gains and losses, the consequences of undisciplined risk management are severe. A single bad session without a stop-loss can wipe out weeks of careful gains. A trader with a 50% win-rate and a good risk-reward ratio will outperform a trader with a 70% win-rate who takes oversized positions. Survival in the market is a prerequisite to profitability. The Core Principles: ### 1 — Risk a Fixed Percentage Per Trade Never risk more than 1–3% of your total account balance on any single trade. This is called the *fixed fractional method* and it is the cornerstone of professional risk management. For example, if your account holds $2,000, your maximum risk per trade should be $20–$60. This approach ensures that even a losing streak of 10 consecutive trades does not devastate your account — it reduces it by a manageable amount, leaving you capital to recover with. ### 2 — Set a Daily Loss Limit Define a hard ceiling for what you are willing to lose in a single trading day. A common benchmark is **5–10% of your account balance.** Once that threshold is hit, your session ends — no exceptions. This rule prevents the most dangerous trading behavior: trying to "recover" losses in the same session by taking larger, more emotional trades. ### 3 — Define a Daily Profit Target Just as you protect against downside, set a realistic **daily profit target of 3–7%.** When you reach it, stop trading. Overtrading in a profitable session is one of the most common ways traders give back their gains. ## Building Your Trading Session Plan A session plan removes in-the-moment decision-making — the primary source of emotional trading mistakes. Before you open your charts, you should already know exactly how you will manage the session. | Parameter | Recommended Range | Notes | |---|---|---| | Max Trades Per Session | 5 – 10 | Quality over quantity | | Risk Per Trade | 1 – 3% of balance | Fixed — never deviate | | Stop After Consecutive Losses | 3 in a row | Prevents emotional spiralling | | Daily Loss Limit | 5 – 10% of balance | Hard stop, no exceptions | | Daily Profit Target | 3 – 7% of balance | Protect your gains, log off | The power of this plan is in its **pre-commitment.** You make the rules when you are calm and rational, then follow them mechanically during the session. No decisions mid-session means no emotional mistakes. ## Position Sizing in Forex & Crypto Calculating the correct position size is how you enforce your 1–3% risk rule with precision. **Forex Formula:** Position Size = (Account Balance × Risk %) ÷ (Stop Loss in Pips × Pip Value) **Crypto Formula:** Position Size = (Account Balance × Risk %) ÷ (Entry Price − Stop Loss Price) Always calculate your position size before entering a trade. Never adjust your stop-loss to fit a desired position size — that is working backwards and destroys your risk management. ## Managing Open Trades: Stop-Loss & Take-Profit ### Stop-Loss Is Non-Negotiable Every trade you open must have a stop-loss placed before your entry is confirmed. Moving your stop-loss further away to avoid being stopped out is a dangerous habit — it invalidates your risk calculation and can turn a small, controlled loss into an account-threatening one. ### Risk-Reward Ratio Aim for a minimum **1:2 risk-to-reward ratio** on every trade. This means your take-profit target should be at least twice the distance of your stop-loss. A trader who achieves this consistently only needs to win 40% of trades to be profitable over time. ### Trailing Stops in Crypto In volatile crypto markets, a **trailing stop** can be a valuable tool — it moves your stop-loss upward as the price moves in your favour, locking in profit while allowing the trade to run further. --- ## The Habits That Destroy Accounts Awareness of destructive trading patterns is half the battle: - **Revenge trading** — placing impulsive trades immediately after a loss to "get back" the money - **Overtrading** — taking low-quality setups out of boredom or greed - **Moving stop-losses** — hoping the market will turn around instead of accepting a small loss - **Averaging into losing positions** — adding to a losing trade without a structured plan - **Ignoring the daily loss limit** — continuing to trade after the limit is reached - **Trading without a session plan** — entering the market with no defined risk parameters **The Rule of 3 Losses:** If you take 3 consecutive losses in a session, close your platform and step away. The market does not owe you a recovery. Your job is to protect your capital and return tomorrow with a clear head. --- ## Test Your Plan on a Demo Account First Before risking real capital, run your session plan on a demo account for a minimum of **30–50 trades across varying market conditions.** This is not about testing whether your strategy produces winning trades — it is about testing whether *you* can follow the rules consistently. Discipline is a skill that must be practiced in low-stakes conditions before it can be trusted in live trading. Only move to a live account when your adherence to risk limits, session rules, and position sizing has become automatic and consistent. --- ## Conclusion The three rules that define surviving traders: 1. **Fixed Risk Per Trade** — Risk 1–3% of your account on every trade, no exceptions 2. **Daily Loss Limit** — Protect your downside with a hard daily stop; when you hit it, the session is over 3. **Consistent Position Sizing** — Keep position sizes calculated and disciplined; never increase size emotionally to recover a loss The traders who last in Forex and crypto markets are not necessarily the ones with the most sophisticated strategies. They are the ones who treat risk management as their primary job. Every trade is secondary to protecting the account that makes future trades possible. Start slow. Build the habits. The market will always be there — your capital may not be if you rush. --- For educational purposes only. Trading involves significant risk of loss. #Forex #CryptoTrading #MoneyManagement #RiskManagement #TradingTips #Bitcoin #Binance #TradeSmarter #TradingMindset #FinancialFreedom #CryptoEducation #ForexEducation #StopLoss #DayTrading #Forex #CryptoTrading #MoneyManagement #RiskManagement #TradingTips #Bitcoin #Binance #TradeSmarter #TradingMindset #FinancialFreedom #CryptoEducation #ForexEducation #StopLoss #DayTrading #TradingCommunity {spot}(BTCUSDT) {spot}(XAUTUSDT)

Money Management for Forex & Crypto Traders

Why Money Management Comes First?
Most traders spend the majority of their time searching for the "best" entry strategy. Yet data consistently shows that most retail traders fail not because of bad strategies, but because of poor risk control. They overtrade, they revenge trade, and they let emotions override their plan.
In Forex and crypto, where leverage amplifies both gains and losses, the consequences of undisciplined risk management are severe. A single bad session without a stop-loss can wipe out weeks of careful gains.
A trader with a 50% win-rate and a good risk-reward ratio will outperform a trader with a 70% win-rate who takes oversized positions. Survival in the market is a prerequisite to profitability.
The Core Principles:
### 1 — Risk a Fixed Percentage Per Trade

Never risk more than 1–3% of your total account balance on any single trade. This is called the *fixed fractional method* and it is the cornerstone of professional risk management.
For example, if your account holds $2,000, your maximum risk per trade should be $20–$60. This approach ensures that even a losing streak of 10 consecutive trades does not devastate your account — it reduces it by a manageable amount, leaving you capital to recover with.

### 2 — Set a Daily Loss Limit
Define a hard ceiling for what you are willing to lose in a single trading day. A common benchmark is **5–10% of your account balance.** Once that threshold is hit, your session ends — no exceptions.

This rule prevents the most dangerous trading behavior: trying to "recover" losses in the same session by taking larger, more emotional trades.

### 3 — Define a Daily Profit Target

Just as you protect against downside, set a realistic **daily profit target of 3–7%.** When you reach it, stop trading. Overtrading in a profitable session is one of the most common ways traders give back their gains.
## Building Your Trading Session Plan

A session plan removes in-the-moment decision-making — the primary source of emotional trading mistakes. Before you open your charts, you should already know exactly how you will manage the session.

| Parameter | Recommended Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Max Trades Per Session | 5 – 10 | Quality over quantity |
| Risk Per Trade | 1 – 3% of balance | Fixed — never deviate |
| Stop After Consecutive Losses | 3 in a row | Prevents emotional spiralling |
| Daily Loss Limit | 5 – 10% of balance | Hard stop, no exceptions |
| Daily Profit Target | 3 – 7% of balance | Protect your gains, log off |

The power of this plan is in its **pre-commitment.** You make the rules when you are calm and rational, then follow them mechanically during the session. No decisions mid-session means no emotional mistakes.
## Position Sizing in Forex & Crypto
Calculating the correct position size is how you enforce your 1–3% risk rule with precision.

**Forex Formula:**
Position Size = (Account Balance × Risk %) ÷ (Stop Loss in Pips × Pip Value)

**Crypto Formula:**
Position Size = (Account Balance × Risk %) ÷ (Entry Price − Stop Loss Price)

Always calculate your position size before entering a trade. Never adjust your stop-loss to fit a desired position size — that is working backwards and destroys your risk management.
## Managing Open Trades: Stop-Loss & Take-Profit

### Stop-Loss Is Non-Negotiable
Every trade you open must have a stop-loss placed before your entry is confirmed. Moving your stop-loss further away to avoid being stopped out is a dangerous habit — it invalidates your risk calculation and can turn a small, controlled loss into an account-threatening one.

### Risk-Reward Ratio

Aim for a minimum **1:2 risk-to-reward ratio** on every trade. This means your take-profit target should be at least twice the distance of your stop-loss. A trader who achieves this consistently only needs to win 40% of trades to be profitable over time.

### Trailing Stops in Crypto

In volatile crypto markets, a **trailing stop** can be a valuable tool — it moves your stop-loss upward as the price moves in your favour, locking in profit while allowing the trade to run further.

---

## The Habits That Destroy Accounts

Awareness of destructive trading patterns is half the battle:

- **Revenge trading** — placing impulsive trades immediately after a loss to "get back" the money
- **Overtrading** — taking low-quality setups out of boredom or greed
- **Moving stop-losses** — hoping the market will turn around instead of accepting a small loss
- **Averaging into losing positions** — adding to a losing trade without a structured plan
- **Ignoring the daily loss limit** — continuing to trade after the limit is reached
- **Trading without a session plan** — entering the market with no defined risk parameters

**The Rule of 3 Losses:** If you take 3 consecutive losses in a session, close your platform and step away. The market does not owe you a recovery. Your job is to protect your capital and return tomorrow with a clear head.

---

## Test Your Plan on a Demo Account First

Before risking real capital, run your session plan on a demo account for a minimum of **30–50 trades across varying market conditions.** This is not about testing whether your strategy produces winning trades — it is about testing whether *you* can follow the rules consistently.

Discipline is a skill that must be practiced in low-stakes conditions before it can be trusted in live trading. Only move to a live account when your adherence to risk limits, session rules, and position sizing has become automatic and consistent.

---

## Conclusion

The three rules that define surviving traders:

1. **Fixed Risk Per Trade** — Risk 1–3% of your account on every trade, no exceptions
2. **Daily Loss Limit** — Protect your downside with a hard daily stop; when you hit it, the session is over
3. **Consistent Position Sizing** — Keep position sizes calculated and disciplined; never increase size emotionally to recover a loss

The traders who last in Forex and crypto markets are not necessarily the ones with the most sophisticated strategies. They are the ones who treat risk management as their primary job. Every trade is secondary to protecting the account that makes future trades possible.

Start slow. Build the habits. The market will always be there — your capital may not be if you rush.

---
For educational purposes only. Trading involves significant risk of loss.
#Forex #CryptoTrading #MoneyManagement #RiskManagement #TradingTips #Bitcoin #Binance #TradeSmarter #TradingMindset #FinancialFreedom #CryptoEducation #ForexEducation #StopLoss #DayTrading #Forex #CryptoTrading #MoneyManagement #RiskManagement #TradingTips #Bitcoin #Binance #TradeSmarter #TradingMindset #FinancialFreedom #CryptoEducation #ForexEducation #StopLoss #DayTrading #TradingCommunity
Understanding Trading Pairs on Binance or Other Crypto Exchanges: When you see a trading pair (e.g., BAND/USDT) on an exchange, the price of the first coin is always expressed in terms of the second coin. Example: BAND/USDT BAND is the Base Coin (the coin you want to buy or sell). USDT is the Quote Coin (the coin used to measure the value, in this case, a stablecoin equivalent to USD). What does this mean? In the BAND/USDT trading pair, the price shown represents how much 1 BAND is worth in USDT. Examples: If BAND/USDT = 1.25, it means 1 BAND = 1.25 USDT (approximately $1.25). If BAND/USDT = 0.95, it means 1 BAND = 0.95 USDT (approximately $0.95). Key Point: In any trading pair, the price always reflects the value of 1 unit of the base coin in terms of the quote coin. More Examples: BTC/USDT: The price of 1 Bitcoin in USDT. ETH/BTC: The price of 1 Ethereum in Bitcoin. ADA/BNB: The price of 1 ADA in BNB. Summary: The highest (High) and lowest (Low) prices on a chart always represent the value of the base coin (the first coin in the pair) in terms of the quote coin (the second coin in the pair). #CryptoTrading #Binance #Crypto101 #TradingPairs #CryptoEducation #LearnCrypto #BandUSDT #Bitcoin #Ethereum #CryptoMarket #TradingTips #CryptoForBeginners #InvestSmart #CryptoExplained #Blockchain #DeFi #CryptoInvesting #TradeSmart #CryptoBasics #BinanceTrading
Understanding Trading Pairs on Binance or Other Crypto Exchanges:

When you see a trading pair (e.g., BAND/USDT) on an exchange, the price of the first coin is always expressed in terms of the second coin.

Example: BAND/USDT
BAND is the Base Coin (the coin you want to buy or sell).
USDT is the Quote Coin (the coin used to measure the value, in this case, a stablecoin equivalent to USD).

What does this mean?

In the BAND/USDT trading pair, the price shown represents how much 1 BAND is worth in USDT.

Examples:
If BAND/USDT = 1.25, it means 1 BAND = 1.25 USDT (approximately $1.25).
If BAND/USDT = 0.95, it means 1 BAND = 0.95 USDT (approximately $0.95).

Key Point:
In any trading pair, the price always reflects the value of 1 unit of the base coin in terms of the quote coin.

More Examples:
BTC/USDT: The price of 1 Bitcoin in USDT.
ETH/BTC: The price of 1 Ethereum in Bitcoin.
ADA/BNB: The price of 1 ADA in BNB.

Summary:
The highest (High) and lowest (Low) prices on a chart always represent the value of the base coin (the first coin in the pair) in terms of the quote coin (the second coin in the pair).
#CryptoTrading #Binance #Crypto101 #TradingPairs #CryptoEducation #LearnCrypto #BandUSDT #Bitcoin #Ethereum #CryptoMarket #TradingTips #CryptoForBeginners #InvestSmart #CryptoExplained #Blockchain #DeFi #CryptoInvesting #TradeSmart #CryptoBasics #BinanceTrading
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