From 1500U to 23,000 U.

In the end, I still deleted him.

It wasn't that he didn't earn enough,

but that he forgot how to survive.

When I first met him,

he was chasing after meme stocks every day,

blowing up his account three times in two days,

using his rent money to speculate in the market.

I didn't teach him candlestick patterns,

nor did I teach him formations,

I just threw three rules at him.

As a result, in four months,

his account grew 15 times.

First rule: Money must be divided.

Split 1500U into three parts:

For day trading, only take small profits, turn off the machine after 5%.

For swing trading, wait for the right moment, don't act until it hits your price.

For the base position, lock it down, don't move even if the sky falls.

At first, he complained it was slow.

Until a colleague lost his entire account in 10 minutes,

only then did he honestly start to diversify.

That day he understood for the first time:

Slow is for survival.

Second rule: Only eat the main upswing, roll during sideways.

I told him one thing:

70% of the market is garbage, don't waste your life.

ADA consolidated for a week,

he eagerly asked if he should ambush.

I only replied with two words:

Wait for volume.

The next day a big bullish candle formed,

he took an 18% profit in one go.

At that moment he finally understood:

Not acting is the mark of a skilled operator.

When profits exceeded 15%,

I directly let him withdraw one-third.

When the money hit his account,

it felt more real than any candlestick.

Third rule: The system is harder than life.

Stop loss at 3%, cut if it hits the line.

Profit at 8%, raise stop loss to break even.

Once he almost impulsively removed a stop loss,

I immediately sent him screenshots of his previous liquidation.

That night LTC dropped 12%,

he only lost 1%.

At that moment he understood:

Stop loss is not admitting defeat, it’s saving your life.

But when his account reached 20,000 U,

he began to get cocky.

Mixing with signal groups,

fully leveraged chasing memes,

mocking others for being "timid".

What was the result?

His assets halved.

In the early morning, he sent a message:

"Bro, if I had gone all in back then, I would have 50,000 now."

I scrolled back to his earlier message

"Thank you, bro, for teaching me risk control",

and suddenly understood.

The market won't eliminate the poor,

it will only eliminate the gamblers who don't follow the rules.

Before I deleted him,

I left one sentence:

From 1500 to 23,000,

it relies on rules, not on the market.

The system keeps you alive,

while arrogance leads to your demise.

Pleasure can last for a moment,

but discipline lasts a lifetime.@财经杨哥