Many people think that making money is just about betting on the right direction, but it's not.

I can turn 1500U into 128,000U, not relying on luck, but on profit-taking discipline and position management.

My specific execution logic:

Only use 30% of the position to test the waters, never go all in, and control risk from the source.

Immediately reduce the position when profits reach 5%-10%, locking in some profits and preventing losses.

Keep the base position to follow the trend, not to miss subsequent market movements, striving to "capture the full wave."

If floating profits double, I must take half, ensuring that the account always has the ability to recover, unafraid of sudden market fluctuations.

Many people lose money for two main reasons: they are reluctant to cut losses when losing and reluctant to take profits when winning.

I always do the opposite: let profits run ahead of risks.

This method seems rigid, not chasing hot trends or playing tricks, yet it allowed me to roll 1500U step by step into 128,000U in 47 days.

It wasn't until the moment I withdrew that I fully understood: discipline is more powerful than luck.

Recently, many friends asked me:

When exactly should I take profits?

How to hold on to the trend without getting off early?

Can small funds still replicate this approach?

The core logic is already outlined above. But trading has always been "easy to know, hard to act," and whether one can strictly execute is the key to success or failure.

The market never lacks opportunities; what it lacks is a system that can maintain discipline and help you move forward steadily.

If you also agree that "slow is fast" and are willing to exchange rules for long-term gains, I am happy to share more details and rhythms.

Real methods are only for those who execute seriously.

Intraday focus: $BTC $FHE $TANSSI

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