In the cryptocurrency world, I have experienced too many myths of overnight wealth and have also witnessed countless tragedies of instant zeroing out. What left the deepest impression on me was a friend's experience: entering the market with a capital of 30,000, through precise judgment, rolling it to 710,000 in half a year, with the account's peak floating profit once exceeding 600,000. But he insisted on betting that 'it could rise again', missed the opportunity to take profits, and in just one day, a crash brought him back to square one, turning all previous gains into bubbles.
This incident completely changed my understanding of the cryptocurrency world: rolling positions is never about luck, but about rhythm; trading is not about explosive power, but about survival rate.
The pit that beginners are most likely to fall into is just two words—itchy hands. As soon as the market shows some signs, they rush to go all in, firing all their bullets; when the real trend finally arrives, they find they have no capital left and can only watch others profit. In fact, the core of rolling positions is never 'rolling', but 'waiting'—waiting for the market to clarify, waiting for the trend to stabilize, waiting for signals to confirm, then it’s not too late to act.
Many people just make a 20% profit and get carried away, immediately increasing their positions, and as a result, when a wave of correction comes down, they not only give back profits but also get their principal stuck. The truly steady rhythm should be like this:
1. After the first order is profitable, withdraw the principal first, and use only the profits to roll over, instantly stabilizing half:
2. Every time the account doubles, add at most 20% position, use profits to earn profits, and never add old capital;
3. Once a topping signal appears, liquidate quickly before the market reacts; even a second delay may lead to being killed.
In the cryptocurrency world, living long is the only way to win. The vast majority of people do not fail to make money, but they cannot hold onto it. If you want to survive in this market for a long time, I suggest you set three iron rules for yourself:
When the profit reaches 50%, immediately move the stop-loss to the cost position, thus bidding farewell to the risk of loss; after the account doubles, forcibly withdraw 30% of the profits and store them in a cold wallet to build a safety cushion.
As long as you see increased volume stagnation, moving averages breaking, and leading coins plummeting, regardless of whether you understand the reasons, leave the market first.
In this market, the top-tier operation is not frequent ordering, but the ability to endure loneliness: the rarest ability is not precise prediction, but resisting temptation. When the once-in-a-decade opportunity appears, whether you dare to enter the field and whether you can hold on will determine whether you can change your fate.

