From 100,000 U to 5,000 U,
You think you are trading,
but in fact, you are sending people to the market.
Last year, a brother asked me:
"Bro, my account is down to 5,000 U."
I opened his records and was silent for three seconds.
Dozens of trades a day, transaction fees higher than profits,
Hoping for a double when the price rises,
Holding on for miracles when it falls,
In the end, it crashed straight to the bottom.
I only asked him one question:
Are you trading, or are you gambling with your life?
You might be the same.
The three-piece set for retail investors that must die:
High-frequency random trades,
Staring at the one-minute candlestick until dizzy,
Thinking you are a day trading god,
but in fact, you are a transaction fee hero.
Believing in holding onto positions,
Shouting for a bull return,
The account returns to zero first.
FOMO all in,
Seeing a hundred times return and going all in,
Waking up with only single digits left.
He was still staring at the market at three in the morning,
Finally breaking down and asking me:
"Bro, have I been slaughtered by the market?"
I said:
No, you handed the knife over yourself.
I only told him to change three things.
First cut, sniper-style trading,
Remove all small timeframes,
Only look for breakthroughs on four-hour charts and above,
At most three trades a day,
If your hands are itchy, walk away from the keyboard.
Second cut, win big, cut losses,
Initial position not exceeding ten percent,
Sell half after a twenty percent rise,
Move the stop-loss for the rest,
If it losses five percent, cut immediately.
Third cut, discipline above all,
If you hit stop-loss twice in a row, turn off the machine,
If emotions run high, stop trading,
Review daily to understand losses.
Turning the tables is not about going all in,
it's about calmness, discipline, and repeated execution.
Later, he told me:
"Bro, no one taught me before."
I replied:
It's not that no one taught you, it's that you refuse to admit you are gambling.
Remember,
Those who get liquidated,
ninety-nine percent die from one phrase:
"Just hold on a little longer and it will come back..."
Now,
Open your trading records,
do you dare to face it,
Are you trading, or are you sending people to the market?

