Many people ask, in the same market conditions, why some can turn one thousand USDT into tens of thousands, while you keep losing.
The problem is not in the direction, but in the rhythm.
Most people trading contracts are essentially gambling.
If it goes up, they rush in; if it goes down, they add. It seems like their judgment is correct, but their accounts can't hold up.
The people around me who succeed do not rely on luck,
but on a method that amplifies profits in line with market trends.
I made it clear to him from the start.
The principal is only responsible for survival, while profits are responsible for offense.
With an account of one thousand USDT, the first order only uses a small portion to test.
The money earned is then used to add the next layer.
If the market is favorable, continue. If not, stop immediately.
By doing this, even if there is a drawdown, the loss is only on profits, not the principal.
Many people lose because they treat rolling positions as an all-in bet.
They add when trapped, hold on when the direction is wrong, and once they win a few trades, they start to lose control.
The correct rhythm is very simple.
First, confirm with a small position. Once the trend is established, follow with profits.
If the space opens up, add another layer accordingly. Once it levels off or breaks, take a step back.
Profits must be locked. After a certain distance, raise the protection.
Reduce positions at key levels and let the remaining ones run on their own.
In this market, whether you can turn things around
depends not on how daring you are to gamble, but on whether you can keep the rhythm right.
I am Uncle Nan, skilled in medium to short-term contracts, medium to long-term spot layout, regularly sharing investment techniques and detailed strategy teaching points.
$PTB $LIGHT $ARC




