Seven Deadly Sins of Crypto Contracts: A Pitfall Guide Summarized by Veterans with Blood and Tears

Step on one, lose money; step on three, and liquidation is not far away.

I have seen too many people staring at the charts during the day and revisiting them late at night, yet their accounts keep shrinking.

The fundamental problem is not in the technology, but in repeatedly stepping into the same pit.

Here are the seven deadliest mistakes in contract trading:

1. Hands can't stay idle, frequently paying fees $XRP

When there is no market movement, forcing trades, thinking 'the more you do, the more you earn', ends up making you the exchange's favorite 'fee supplier'. The market is in disorder for 70% of the time, and frequent trading only wears down the capital.

2. Wanting to catch both long and short, ultimately hitting both sides in the face

Going long when the market rises and going short when it falls, trying to catch every fluctuation. But the trend is the only true friend; trading against the trend is like rowing upstream, a laborious and thankless task.

3. Snatching rebounds and catching flying knives, every cut draws blood

'Bottom fishing' sounds enticing, but rebounds during a downtrend are often the sharpest knives. Without precise judgment and discipline, snatching rebounds is like standing at the edge of a cliff.

4. Indecisive, missing the best timing

When signals appear, hesitating to enter the market, and regretting chasing highs after the market has moved. Trading is not about perfection, but about seizing certainty. Missing out is more regrettable than making a mistake.

5. Always feeling targeted by major players

Once in loss, feeling like being watched; in fact, large funds don't care about retail investors' small positions. This victim mentality only leads to a vicious cycle of emotional trading.

6. Full position gamble, zeroing out in one night

Maxing out leverage and position size may seem brave but is actually foolish. A single black swan event in the crypto world can lead to a complete exit for heavily invested traders; maintaining a light position is the highest form of risk control.

7. Refusing to admit mistakes, leading to expanded losses

Holding on stubbornly when the direction is wrong, hoping the market will pull back to save you. But the market never owes anyone a favor; small losses that aren't cut will lead to large losses.

The key to avoiding these pitfalls:

Limit trading times every day, and stay out of the market without clear opportunities

Strictly control single losses within 2% of capital

Prioritize withdrawing profits after making gains, and then roll profits back in

The contract market specializes in correcting all forms of non-compliance. Making fewer mistakes is more important than making more money.

Follow me @萧哥带单日记 , no bragging, no empty promises, just sharing the real skills that keep you alive in the market! Continuing tonight, recover and flip the account, come join quickly!