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Ming_铭哥
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Ming_铭哥

🔍公众号:铭哥说币 🔍聊天室ID:mg8888 合约精通,深耕市场多年,擅长从K线褶皱里洞悉脉络,只分享能落地的交易干货!
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1【 Chat Room】, find the entrance 2. Click "➕" in the upper right corner to add friend #带单大神 3. 🚀 Chat Room ID: 【mg9999】 this is Ming's exclusive chat room. 4. One-click search 🔍 and you can add me~ 5. Family, add me first, and we can communicate about market trends and opportunities directly in real-time. 6. Communication will be smoother in the future, and you won't have to worry about messages being lost #加密市场回调 .
1【 Chat Room】, find the entrance
2. Click "➕" in the upper right corner to add friend #带单大神
3. 🚀 Chat Room ID: 【mg9999】 this is Ming's exclusive chat room.
4. One-click search 🔍 and you can add me~
5. Family, add me first, and we can communicate about market trends and opportunities directly in real-time.
6. Communication will be smoother in the future, and you won't have to worry about messages being lost #加密市场回调 .
PINNED
ETH has won 9 consecutive trades in 2 days, doubling each time How much of this big short have you captured? More Dan! How are you all doing? I am Ming Ge, a professional analyst and teacher, a mentor and friend on your investment journey! As an analyst, the most basic thing is to help everyone make money. I will help you resolve confusion and locked positions, speaking with strength. When you are lost and don't know what to do, follow Ming Ge to point you in the right direction #ETH
ETH has won 9 consecutive trades in 2 days, doubling each time

How much of this big short have you captured?

More Dan! How are you all doing?

I am Ming Ge, a professional analyst and teacher, a mentor and friend on your investment journey! As an analyst, the most basic thing is to help everyone make money. I will help you resolve confusion and locked positions, speaking with strength. When you are lost and don't know what to do, follow Ming Ge to point you in the right direction #ETH
I used a really simple strategy to consistently make two to three hundred USDT daily; it’s not that hard. It’s not some overnight riches myth; it’s results you can actually achieve every day. To put it plainly: as long as the market is volatile enough, I can pull money out of it. No chart watching, no staring at the screen, no drawing lines—I've still made profits during sideways action. Sounds like bragging? It’s not. There’s a buddy of mine who multiplied his investment several times and directly cashed out to buy a car. And there’s a newbie who turned a small amount of capital into a decent size in just a month. As long as you hit the right rhythm, it’s really not that difficult. Let me be direct—most retail traders lose money not because the market is bad, but because they enter at the wrong time, get the direction wrong, and their positions are all over the place. I guide these folks; they don’t need any special skills—whether they understand the tech or not. Just two things: listen to advice and execute. What really matters isn’t some magical trading strategy. Don’t believe those selling candlestick courses. The core elements are just a few: rhythm, position sizing, rebalancing, and an exit strategy. Get the rhythm right, and the market will naturally hand you money; have a reasonable position size, and you can withstand the risks; rebalance smoothly, and you can ride the trend; if you’ve thought through your exit strategy, you won’t stubbornly hold onto losing positions. Once you truly navigate these steps, you’ll realize it’s nothing like just guessing price movements. Right now, many are still gambling, betting that the next trade will recover losses, betting that the next wave will make them rich. But honestly, even if you win a bet occasionally, you might have already lost several times over beforehand. Have you encountered these issues? The more you trade, the more chaotic it gets, and you can’t stop. Even when you’ve got the direction right, you still end up losing money; you can’t hold onto positions and keep itching to open new ones. You’ve learned a ton of methods, but now you’re just emotionally drained. Bro, if you’ve fallen into any of this, don’t force it. The crypto space isn’t lacking in opportunities; it’s lacking in your confidence to not go down the wrong path or hit the wrong rhythm. If this keeps up, you’re just paying tuition to the market. Stop always thinking about hitting a big win—what you really need to focus on now is how to recover your account, stabilize it, and build it up bit by bit. This time, I’ll help you truly turn things around @MG59991
I used a really simple strategy to consistently make two to three hundred USDT daily; it’s not that hard.

It’s not some overnight riches myth; it’s results you can actually achieve every day.

To put it plainly: as long as the market is volatile enough, I can pull money out of it.

No chart watching, no staring at the screen, no drawing lines—I've still made profits during sideways action.

Sounds like bragging? It’s not.

There’s a buddy of mine who multiplied his investment several times and directly cashed out to buy a car.

And there’s a newbie who turned a small amount of capital into a decent size in just a month.

As long as you hit the right rhythm, it’s really not that difficult.

Let me be direct—most retail traders lose money not because the market is bad, but because they enter at the wrong time, get the direction wrong, and their positions are all over the place.

I guide these folks; they don’t need any special skills—whether they understand the tech or not.

Just two things: listen to advice and execute.

What really matters isn’t some magical trading strategy.

Don’t believe those selling candlestick courses.

The core elements are just a few: rhythm, position sizing, rebalancing, and an exit strategy.

Get the rhythm right, and the market will naturally hand you money;
have a reasonable position size, and you can withstand the risks;
rebalance smoothly, and you can ride the trend;
if you’ve thought through your exit strategy, you won’t stubbornly hold onto losing positions.

Once you truly navigate these steps, you’ll realize it’s nothing like just guessing price movements.

Right now, many are still gambling, betting that the next trade will recover losses, betting that the next wave will make them rich.

But honestly, even if you win a bet occasionally, you might have already lost several times over beforehand.

Have you encountered these issues?

The more you trade, the more chaotic it gets, and you can’t stop.

Even when you’ve got the direction right, you still end up losing money; you can’t hold onto positions and keep itching to open new ones.

You’ve learned a ton of methods, but now you’re just emotionally drained.

Bro, if you’ve fallen into any of this, don’t force it.

The crypto space isn’t lacking in opportunities; it’s lacking in your confidence to not go down the wrong path or hit the wrong rhythm.

If this keeps up, you’re just paying tuition to the market.

Stop always thinking about hitting a big win—what you really need to focus on now is how to recover your account, stabilize it, and build it up bit by bit.

This time, I’ll help you truly turn things around @Ming_铭哥
A lot of folks are rolling with just a few hundred bucks, not even a grand, but in their minds, they're dreaming of flipping it tenfold overnight. Honestly, that mindset usually leads to one outcome in the crypto space: becoming liquidity for someone else's play. When capital is low, what's the biggest fear? It's not slow gains; it's dying too fast. Not long ago, I had a follower who came in with a small account, and his hands were itching; he'd see the candlestick move and want to jump in. My first words to him were: hold your horses, staying alive is more important than making money. We keep it simple—only trade when we’re confident in the moves. No touching the choppy markets, and if the direction ain't clear, we stay put. A lot of people are placing dozens of trades daily, looking busy, but really just racking up fees. The trades that actually make money often don't require that much action. At first, he made a little on his first trade. I didn’t let him increase his stake; instead, I told him to roll with just that profit. The gains are the ammo, and if he loses, it’s just profit giving back, no harm to the principal. Slowly rolling, his position grew bigger, and he became steadier. One time, the market was super volatile, and everyone was screaming bullish or bearish; he wanted to jump in too. I just said: don’t move, wait for the signal. When the market finally broke out, that’s when we entered, riding the trend fully while others were getting liquidated, and we were already taking profits. The biggest issue for small capital traders is impatience. Today they’re bottom fishing, tomorrow they’re cutting losses; it gets messier, and in the end, the account hits zero. The logic for flipping small funds is pretty straightforward: be steady, control your position, and take profits when it's time. Flipping the account is just the outcome, not the goal. What really matters is one thing—can you keep surviving in this market? The market never takes care of the impatient; missing a wave is fine, but if you blow your account, you’ll just have to wait for the next opportunity. @MG59991
A lot of folks are rolling with just a few hundred bucks, not even a grand, but in their minds, they're dreaming of flipping it tenfold overnight.

Honestly, that mindset usually leads to one outcome in the crypto space: becoming liquidity for someone else's play.

When capital is low, what's the biggest fear?

It's not slow gains; it's dying too fast.

Not long ago, I had a follower who came in with a small account, and his hands were itching; he'd see the candlestick move and want to jump in.

My first words to him were: hold your horses, staying alive is more important than making money.

We keep it simple—only trade when we’re confident in the moves.

No touching the choppy markets, and if the direction ain't clear, we stay put.

A lot of people are placing dozens of trades daily, looking busy, but really just racking up fees.

The trades that actually make money often don't require that much action.

At first, he made a little on his first trade.

I didn’t let him increase his stake; instead, I told him to roll with just that profit.

The gains are the ammo, and if he loses, it’s just profit giving back, no harm to the principal.

Slowly rolling, his position grew bigger, and he became steadier.

One time, the market was super volatile, and everyone was screaming bullish or bearish; he wanted to jump in too.

I just said: don’t move, wait for the signal.

When the market finally broke out, that’s when we entered, riding the trend fully while others were getting liquidated, and we were already taking profits.

The biggest issue for small capital traders is impatience.

Today they’re bottom fishing, tomorrow they’re cutting losses; it gets messier, and in the end, the account hits zero.

The logic for flipping small funds is pretty straightforward: be steady, control your position, and take profits when it's time.

Flipping the account is just the outcome, not the goal.

What really matters is one thing—can you keep surviving in this market?

The market never takes care of the impatient; missing a wave is fine, but if you blow your account, you’ll just have to wait for the next opportunity. @Ming_铭哥
After years in the crypto game, my biggest regret isn't losing money, but making a few million without cashing out. In that bull run of 2020, I heavily invested in a coin that skyrocketed in just a few months. I was grinning like a fool, staring at my balance every day, even thinking about which property to buy. But I made the classic mistake that most traders do—being too greedy. I kept thinking it would keep climbing, and then the market flipped on me faster than anyone could imagine. The millions I had made were quickly spat back into the market $COS . After that, I truly understood: knowing how to buy makes you a novice, but knowing when to sell makes you a pro. I set some hard rules for myself. First, take profits in stages. When it hits my target, I’ll pull back my principal and lock in profits, leaving the remaining position to ride the trend, without fantasizing about selling at the peak. Second, set stop-losses in advance. If losses exceed expectations, I’m out immediately. When the market goes wild, execution is more important than judgment. Third, don’t be greedy for the last bit. I don’t want the fish head, and I’m not grabbing the tail; I’m just eating the safest part in the middle. Over the years, I’ve seen too many people make money only to give it back because they only know how to chase, not how to cash out $LAB . Now, my main goal in trading isn’t to get rich quick but to survive long-term. Profits that are in your pocket truly belong to you. If you want to avoid pitfalls and learn real profit-taking and stop-loss strategies, feel free to hit me up @MG59991 .
After years in the crypto game, my biggest regret isn't losing money, but making a few million without cashing out.

In that bull run of 2020, I heavily invested in a coin that skyrocketed in just a few months. I was grinning like a fool, staring at my balance every day, even thinking about which property to buy.

But I made the classic mistake that most traders do—being too greedy.

I kept thinking it would keep climbing, and then the market flipped on me faster than anyone could imagine. The millions I had made were quickly spat back into the market $COS .

After that, I truly understood: knowing how to buy makes you a novice, but knowing when to sell makes you a pro. I set some hard rules for myself.

First, take profits in stages.

When it hits my target, I’ll pull back my principal and lock in profits, leaving the remaining position to ride the trend, without fantasizing about selling at the peak.

Second, set stop-losses in advance.

If losses exceed expectations, I’m out immediately. When the market goes wild, execution is more important than judgment.

Third, don’t be greedy for the last bit.

I don’t want the fish head, and I’m not grabbing the tail; I’m just eating the safest part in the middle.

Over the years, I’ve seen too many people make money only to give it back because they only know how to chase, not how to cash out $LAB .

Now, my main goal in trading isn’t to get rich quick but to survive long-term. Profits that are in your pocket truly belong to you.

If you want to avoid pitfalls and learn real profit-taking and stop-loss strategies, feel free to hit me up @Ming_铭哥 .
Friends with limited capital, take a pause and heed my advice. The crypto space isn't a casino; it's a battlefield of strategies. With limited funds, you need to be steady, like an experienced hunter keeping calm. Last year, I mentored a newbie whose account was just starting. At first, he was so nervous he couldn’t even place a trade, afraid of losing everything in one shot. I told him, "Stick to the rules, and you'll gradually find your way up." Months later, his account broke into a decent size, and he never got liquidated once. Some ask if it was luck? Absolutely not, it was all about hard discipline. These few “life-preserving and profit-generating” iron rules helped him get from the starting line to where he is now: First, split your capital into several portions and keep a safety net. Break your principal into parts: One part for day trading, focusing on major coins, cashing out when volatility hits a certain percentage. Another part for swing trading, waiting for clear opportunities before making a move, holding positions for a few days to seek stability. And a portion reserved as a trump card, which you don’t touch even in extreme market conditions; this gives you the confidence to bounce back. Have you seen those who go all-in? They get euphoric when prices rise and panic when they drop; they can’t go far. Real winners know to keep some funds on the sidelines. Second, only chase trends, don’t waste time in sideways markets. The market spends most of its time in consolidation, and frequent trading just means paying fees to the platform. Stay still when there are no signals, and act decisively when there are. Once you hit a certain profit percentage, withdraw half to secure your gains; that’s a reliable strategy. A pro’s rhythm is to stay still unless it’s a sure shot. When your account doubles, calmly cash out; don’t rush or chase the highs. Third, prioritize the rules and manage your emotions. Never let a single trade's stop-loss exceed a certain percentage; exit when it reaches that point. Once you’re in profit beyond a certain percentage, cut your position in half and let the remaining profits run. Never average down on losses; don’t let emotions drag you down. You don’t need to perfectly time every market move, but you must always stick to your rules. Making money relies on a system that keeps your impulsive hands in check. Remember, having little capital isn’t scary; what's frightening is constantly chasing a big comeback. Turning small funds into large profits relies not on luck but on rules, patience, and discipline. Once I was lost in the dark, but now I hold the light. The light stays on; will you follow? @MG59991
Friends with limited capital, take a pause and heed my advice.

The crypto space isn't a casino; it's a battlefield of strategies.

With limited funds, you need to be steady, like an experienced hunter keeping calm.

Last year, I mentored a newbie whose account was just starting. At first, he was so nervous he couldn’t even place a trade, afraid of losing everything in one shot.

I told him, "Stick to the rules, and you'll gradually find your way up."

Months later, his account broke into a decent size, and he never got liquidated once.

Some ask if it was luck?

Absolutely not, it was all about hard discipline.

These few “life-preserving and profit-generating” iron rules helped him get from the starting line to where he is now:

First, split your capital into several portions and keep a safety net.

Break your principal into parts:

One part for day trading, focusing on major coins, cashing out when volatility hits a certain percentage.

Another part for swing trading, waiting for clear opportunities before making a move, holding positions for a few days to seek stability.

And a portion reserved as a trump card, which you don’t touch even in extreme market conditions; this gives you the confidence to bounce back.

Have you seen those who go all-in?

They get euphoric when prices rise and panic when they drop; they can’t go far. Real winners know to keep some funds on the sidelines.

Second, only chase trends, don’t waste time in sideways markets.

The market spends most of its time in consolidation, and frequent trading just means paying fees to the platform.

Stay still when there are no signals, and act decisively when there are.

Once you hit a certain profit percentage, withdraw half to secure your gains; that’s a reliable strategy.

A pro’s rhythm is to stay still unless it’s a sure shot.

When your account doubles, calmly cash out; don’t rush or chase the highs.

Third, prioritize the rules and manage your emotions.

Never let a single trade's stop-loss exceed a certain percentage; exit when it reaches that point.

Once you’re in profit beyond a certain percentage, cut your position in half and let the remaining profits run.

Never average down on losses; don’t let emotions drag you down.

You don’t need to perfectly time every market move, but you must always stick to your rules.

Making money relies on a system that keeps your impulsive hands in check.

Remember, having little capital isn’t scary; what's frightening is constantly chasing a big comeback.

Turning small funds into large profits relies not on luck but on rules, patience, and discipline.

Once I was lost in the dark, but now I hold the light.

The light stays on; will you follow? @Ming_铭哥
A couple of days ago, we had a family gathering and I found out my cousin has been in the crypto game for 5 years. He started with $1500 just to test the waters, and now his account has hit seven figures. He’s not the type to stare at the charts all day, doesn’t mess with futures, and steers clear of those mooning altcoins. He says he’s lazy, so he has to stick to lazy methods. After a massive pump, when it starts to retrace slowly, that's big money quietly accumulating. When it suddenly crashes and doesn’t bounce back, that’s the money pulling out. High volume at peaks doesn’t always indicate a top, but low volume at highs is a real danger signal. A big bullish candle doesn’t necessarily mean a bottom; the true bottom is built slowly by accumulating funds. He says candlesticks aren’t just patterns; they reflect human emotions. For many, the biggest enemy isn’t the market itself, but the urge to always do something. He often stays in cash, and when he does, it’s for a long time. Those who can resist the urge to act often find it easier to catch the big moves. Many strategies that actually survive are pretty boring. It’s just a few simple things repeated over and over. A lot of people don’t lose to the market; they lose to their itchy trigger fingers @MG59991 .
A couple of days ago, we had a family gathering and I found out my cousin has been in the crypto game for 5 years.

He started with $1500 just to test the waters, and now his account has hit seven figures.

He’s not the type to stare at the charts all day, doesn’t mess with futures, and steers clear of those mooning altcoins.

He says he’s lazy, so he has to stick to lazy methods.

After a massive pump, when it starts to retrace slowly, that's big money quietly accumulating.

When it suddenly crashes and doesn’t bounce back, that’s the money pulling out.

High volume at peaks doesn’t always indicate a top, but low volume at highs is a real danger signal.

A big bullish candle doesn’t necessarily mean a bottom; the true bottom is built slowly by accumulating funds.

He says candlesticks aren’t just patterns; they reflect human emotions.

For many, the biggest enemy isn’t the market itself, but the urge to always do something.

He often stays in cash, and when he does, it’s for a long time.

Those who can resist the urge to act often find it easier to catch the big moves.

Many strategies that actually survive are pretty boring.

It’s just a few simple things repeated over and over.

A lot of people don’t lose to the market; they lose to their itchy trigger fingers @Ming_铭哥 .
From losing sleep to raking in 3000–5000U daily, what I relied on was… Back then, I had 32K U in my account, down nearly 200K from the peak. The worst part wasn't the losses, but rather— I knew I was making rookie mistakes, yet I couldn't control myself. Frequent trading, going all-in, chasing pumps and dumps… Every time I told myself, "This is the last time," but the next time, I went even heavier. One night, I closed my last trade at 3 AM, losing 4700U, and I just turned off my phone. Lying in bed, my mind was blank, heart racing. $STO $SIREN $RIVER I really couldn't sleep. That day, I realized: It wasn't the market that was tough; it was that I didn’t have a reusable trading system. I started obsessively reviewing my trades from the past year, breaking down each major loss: Why was my stop-loss always a step too late? Why did I often make the right judgment but trade the wrong way? Why couldn't I hold when the price went up, yet panicked when it dropped? Eventually, I summarized the answers into one sentence: Making money isn't about one big hit; it's about consistent, rhythmic strikes. I spent 3 months restructuring my trading system. I focused on just three things: Understanding the rhythm Only entering the market when it provides "signal + structure," no more relying on gut feelings. Managing my position size Always leaving room for recovery, never going all-in. Compounding my position Increasing my stake when my account grows, lightening up when the market weakens, executing like a machine. Now, I'm not nailing every single trade. But I have 5–8 high-probability setups each month that I can bet big on. I consistently start with 3000U daily, and when the market's hot, I can push it to 5000U+. And the most important thing is— I can finally get some sleep. Bro, can you sleep now? Or are you still glued to the screen until dawn, holding on even after a liquidation? Have you thought about it, that it’s not you who can’t make it, but you just haven’t found the right path? @MG59991
From losing sleep to raking in 3000–5000U daily, what I relied on was…

Back then, I had 32K U in my account, down nearly 200K from the peak.

The worst part wasn't the losses, but rather—
I knew I was making rookie mistakes, yet I couldn't control myself.

Frequent trading, going all-in, chasing pumps and dumps…

Every time I told myself, "This is the last time," but the next time, I went even heavier.

One night, I closed my last trade at 3 AM, losing 4700U, and I just turned off my phone.

Lying in bed, my mind was blank, heart racing. $STO $SIREN $RIVER

I really couldn't sleep.

That day, I realized:
It wasn't the market that was tough; it was that I didn’t have a reusable trading system.
I started obsessively reviewing my trades from the past year,

breaking down each major loss:
Why was my stop-loss always a step too late?
Why did I often make the right judgment but trade the wrong way?
Why couldn't I hold when the price went up, yet panicked when it dropped?

Eventually, I summarized the answers into one sentence:
Making money isn't about one big hit; it's about consistent, rhythmic strikes.
I spent 3 months restructuring my trading system.

I focused on just three things:

Understanding the rhythm
Only entering the market when it provides "signal + structure," no more relying on gut feelings.

Managing my position size
Always leaving room for recovery, never going all-in.

Compounding my position
Increasing my stake when my account grows, lightening up when the market weakens, executing like a machine.

Now, I'm not nailing every single trade.

But I have 5–8 high-probability setups each month that I can bet big on.

I consistently start with 3000U daily, and when the market's hot, I can push it to 5000U+.

And the most important thing is—
I can finally get some sleep.

Bro, can you sleep now?

Or are you still glued to the screen until dawn, holding on even after a liquidation?

Have you thought about it, that it’s not you who can’t make it, but you just haven’t found the right path? @Ming_铭哥
He asked me if he could still turn things around with 20k USDT; six months later, his account grew by 150k. At the end of last year, a buddy reached out to me, saying he was down to only 20k USDT and asked if he could still recover. I checked his trading history and told him straight up: It's not about the funds; it's about your rhythm being off. So, I guided him to focus on three types of rhythm trades. $STO Strict stop-losses and heavy positions only at key levels. $SIREN We moved from the first phase: 46k USDT, to the second phase: 97k USDT, and by the end of May, his account balance hit—153k USDT. $RIVER It’s not luck. It’s rhythm + execution + mindset. The hardest part of crypto isn’t the market, but whether you can hold your ground and not overtrade. The thing he repeated the most was: "Now I really can’t make any random moves; I only dare to open trades when you give me the heads-up." It’s not that you’re not moving fast enough, you’re just stumbling around in the dark alone. Brother Ming has always been here, and the light is up ahead. If you don’t keep up, you’ll be stuck in the night forever. @MG59991
He asked me if he could still turn things around with 20k USDT; six months later, his account grew by 150k.

At the end of last year, a buddy reached out to me, saying he was down to only 20k USDT and asked if he could still recover.

I checked his trading history and told him straight up:

It's not about the funds; it's about your rhythm being off.

So, I guided him to focus on three types of rhythm trades. $STO

Strict stop-losses and heavy positions only at key levels. $SIREN

We moved from the first phase: 46k USDT,

to the second phase: 97k USDT,

and by the end of May, his account balance hit—153k USDT. $RIVER

It’s not luck.

It’s rhythm + execution + mindset.

The hardest part of crypto isn’t the market,

but whether you can hold your ground and not overtrade.

The thing he repeated the most was:
"Now I really can’t make any random moves; I only dare to open trades when you give me the heads-up."

It’s not that you’re not moving fast enough,

you’re just stumbling around in the dark alone.

Brother Ming has always been here, and the light is up ahead.

If you don’t keep up, you’ll be stuck in the night forever. @Ming_铭哥
A few months back, he took a massive hit of 400k, and there was a moment when he seriously considered quitting the crypto game. Later, he hit me up, first thing he said was: "Bro, I can't take it anymore, I've already lost 400k." I didn't rush to respond. Because I know that for those who are bleeding money, it's not the cash they fear the most, but rather the lack of direction. Their confidence is gone. His mindset had completely shattered, and he came off as totally lost. $SIREN He went on to say that this past year he had followed a bunch of signal groups, and got liquidated three times. Going long and short was all just a gamble; every time he made a little profit, he wanted to double down, which led to one round of losses after another. That 400k loss didn't just vanish in a day or two. $RIVER It was built up over countless emotional trades, averaging down, and gambling positions. I asked him, "How much do you have left now?" He looked down and said: "I’ve only got 5200 U left, can I even keep playing?" I looked at him and calmly said: "You have a real shot at a comeback, but you need to do exactly what I say and don’t go rogue." From that day on, he handed all trading authority over to me. He followed every trade, no more wild moves. We only take high win-rate trades and avoid those unclear, murky markets. In 20 days, his account surged from 5200 U to 12k. In 37 days, it climbed back to 26k. In 62 days, his account broke six figures. Now, he’s no longer that newbie gambling with all his funds. He’s become one of my most reliable supporters. Every signal I used to call, he can now assess clearly on his own. His comeback isn’t because I’m some kind of genius. It’s because he genuinely wanted to change and was willing to follow the rules. Want to know how he turned it around? What methods he used? I can’t directly spill the beans. Because those who truly understand have already come looking for me. @MG59991
A few months back, he took a massive hit of 400k, and there was a moment when he seriously considered quitting the crypto game.

Later, he hit me up, first thing he said was: "Bro, I can't take it anymore, I've already lost 400k."
I didn't rush to respond.

Because I know that for those who are bleeding money, it's not the cash they fear the most, but rather the lack of direction.
Their confidence is gone.

His mindset had completely shattered, and he came off as totally lost. $SIREN

He went on to say that this past year he had followed a bunch of signal groups, and got liquidated three times.

Going long and short was all just a gamble; every time he made a little profit, he wanted to double down, which led to one round of losses after another.

That 400k loss didn't just vanish in a day or two. $RIVER

It was built up over countless emotional trades, averaging down, and gambling positions.

I asked him, "How much do you have left now?"

He looked down and said: "I’ve only got 5200 U left, can I even keep playing?"

I looked at him and calmly said:
"You have a real shot at a comeback, but you need to do exactly what I say and don’t go rogue."

From that day on, he handed all trading authority over to me.

He followed every trade, no more wild moves.

We only take high win-rate trades and avoid those unclear, murky markets.

In 20 days, his account surged from 5200 U to 12k.

In 37 days, it climbed back to 26k.

In 62 days, his account broke six figures.

Now, he’s no longer that newbie gambling with all his funds.

He’s become one of my most reliable supporters.

Every signal I used to call, he can now assess clearly on his own.

His comeback isn’t because I’m some kind of genius.

It’s because he genuinely wanted to change and was willing to follow the rules.

Want to know how he turned it around? What methods he used?

I can’t directly spill the beans.

Because those who truly understand have already come looking for me. @Ming_铭哥
In the crypto space, most of the wealth doesn’t come from luck but from a precise grasp of the rhythm. I started as a newbie too, went through many detours, suffered losses, and almost gave up. $STO I remember once I almost lost my remaining 3000U. At that time, my account was down to just 3000U. $SIREN Watching others rake in profits while I was left with an empty account was really disheartening. But I knew I couldn’t just throw in the towel. $RIVER There’s no such thing as 'luck' in crypto. Those who really make money have methods and a rhythm. I did two things. I stopped guessing the market and chasing trends blindly. I understood that the market is too unstable, and trying to catch falling knives is like gambling with your life. In the end, I just followed the trend with swing trading, operating with caution instead of making blind moves. I controlled my drawdowns, didn’t go all in, and took profits when I could. Every time I made a profit, I’d pull back my principal and let the remaining profits compound slowly. The key is to take profits and not be greedy. Because in the crypto world, the worst fear is getting liquidated, losing faster than you win. Then, I found my own rhythm. Slowly, I rolled my 3000U up to 54,000 without rushing. No liquidations, no gambling with my life—just stability and compounding. What you see is not that others have found shortcuts. It’s that they know better how to hold their ground and not let emotions dictate their trades. Many people fail, not because they don’t know what to do. But because they act too hastily, trade too frequently, and can't control their emotions, ultimately getting 'harvested' by the market. I’ve summarized one point—don’t let emotions control you. Even if you see the right direction, don’t chase blindly. Wait for the right moment to enter, and don’t be scared off by market fluctuations. I’ll let you in on a secret: compounding is the ultimate money-making strategy. Don’t think you can earn hundreds of times overnight; that’s unrealistic. Steady and slow wins the race—day by day, that’s real wealth. Up to now, I’ve been consistently profitable. I’ve also brought some friends along; they started with 500U and have steadily profited, multiplying their returns several times over a few months. Remember, the key to making money in crypto is to hold steady. You can roll up just like I did. Not seeking overnight riches, just aiming for gradual wealth. @MG59991
In the crypto space, most of the wealth doesn’t come from luck but from a precise grasp of the rhythm.

I started as a newbie too, went through many detours, suffered losses, and almost gave up. $STO

I remember once I almost lost my remaining 3000U.

At that time, my account was down to just 3000U. $SIREN

Watching others rake in profits while I was left with an empty account was really disheartening.

But I knew I couldn’t just throw in the towel. $RIVER

There’s no such thing as 'luck' in crypto.

Those who really make money have methods and a rhythm.

I did two things.

I stopped guessing the market and chasing trends blindly.

I understood that the market is too unstable, and trying to catch falling knives is like gambling with your life.

In the end, I just followed the trend with swing trading, operating with caution instead of making blind moves.

I controlled my drawdowns, didn’t go all in, and took profits when I could.

Every time I made a profit, I’d pull back my principal and let the remaining profits compound slowly.

The key is to take profits and not be greedy.

Because in the crypto world, the worst fear is getting liquidated, losing faster than you win.

Then, I found my own rhythm.

Slowly, I rolled my 3000U up to 54,000 without rushing.

No liquidations, no gambling with my life—just stability and compounding.

What you see is not that others have found shortcuts.

It’s that they know better how to hold their ground and not let emotions dictate their trades.

Many people fail, not because they don’t know what to do.

But because they act too hastily, trade too frequently, and can't control their emotions, ultimately getting 'harvested' by the market.

I’ve summarized one point—don’t let emotions control you.

Even if you see the right direction, don’t chase blindly.

Wait for the right moment to enter, and don’t be scared off by market fluctuations.

I’ll let you in on a secret: compounding is the ultimate money-making strategy.

Don’t think you can earn hundreds of times overnight; that’s unrealistic.

Steady and slow wins the race—day by day, that’s real wealth.

Up to now, I’ve been consistently profitable.

I’ve also brought some friends along; they started with 500U and have steadily profited, multiplying their returns several times over a few months.

Remember, the key to making money in crypto is to hold steady.

You can roll up just like I did.

Not seeking overnight riches, just aiming for gradual wealth. @Ming_铭哥
I've been in the crypto game for 7 years, flipping 50k into 7 million. These hard-earned rules are my biggest takeaway over the years. Cutting through the fluff, let’s get to the point. When prices spike quickly and then dip slowly, don’t panic sell $RED . If the price shoots up and then drifts back down—don’t get shaky. This is just a pump-and-dump by the whales, messing with your emotions to scoop up your bags. What really gets you are those sudden price surges of 40% followed by a quick 50% drop—what I call the “guillotine move.” That’s a trap for the fools chasing highs. If it drops fast and bounces slowly, don’t get greedy $JOE . When the waterfall hits, followed by a small rebound—don’t rush to catch the bottom. This is just the market makers dumping their bags in disguise. “Since it’s dropped so much, it must be due for a rise, right?” Wake up. The last fake bounce is designed to trap those who think they’re clever. If there’s volume at the top, no need to worry; if there’s dead volume at the top, it’s time to bounce. If the price is hitting highs with increasing volume—there might still be some gains to be had. But if it’s just sideways at the top with stagnant volume—get out while you can. Without new blood coming in, a crash is just a matter of time. Remember: volume at the top extends life, while shrinkage at the bottom indicates a true bottom. If there’s unusual activity at the bottom, don’t get excited; sustained volume is the real signal. If the price is down bad and suddenly there’s a massive bullish candlestick—don’t get too hyped. It could just be a bluff by the whales. Keep an eye on sustained volume: if it’s been low for six months and then suddenly spikes, that’s a genuine accumulation signal. Trading crypto is about understanding the market psychology; volume leads price. Just looking at the candlesticks won’t win you trades; you need to watch how people are reacting. Volume is the mirror reflecting emotions. Price is the dog led by emotions, while volume is the leash. Before PEPE skyrocketed in 2025, on-chain trading volume rose for 7 days straight, over 200%—once volume moves, price goes wild. Understand just one of these five points, and you’re already on the path to becoming a winner. Nail three of them, and you can crush 90% of the retail crowd. If you don’t want to be led around by the big players every day and want steadier opportunities— follow Ming Ge. Daily market signals and strategies laid out in advance. If you’re going to trade, trade like the big players. @MG59991
I've been in the crypto game for 7 years, flipping 50k into 7 million.

These hard-earned rules are my biggest takeaway over the years.

Cutting through the fluff, let’s get to the point.

When prices spike quickly and then dip slowly, don’t panic sell $RED .

If the price shoots up and then drifts back down—don’t get shaky.

This is just a pump-and-dump by the whales, messing with your emotions to scoop up your bags.

What really gets you are those sudden price surges of 40% followed by a quick 50% drop—what I call the “guillotine move.”

That’s a trap for the fools chasing highs.

If it drops fast and bounces slowly, don’t get greedy $JOE .

When the waterfall hits, followed by a small rebound—don’t rush to catch the bottom.

This is just the market makers dumping their bags in disguise.

“Since it’s dropped so much, it must be due for a rise, right?” Wake up.

The last fake bounce is designed to trap those who think they’re clever.

If there’s volume at the top, no need to worry; if there’s dead volume at the top, it’s time to bounce.

If the price is hitting highs with increasing volume—there might still be some gains to be had.

But if it’s just sideways at the top with stagnant volume—get out while you can.

Without new blood coming in, a crash is just a matter of time.

Remember: volume at the top extends life, while shrinkage at the bottom indicates a true bottom.

If there’s unusual activity at the bottom, don’t get excited; sustained volume is the real signal.

If the price is down bad and suddenly there’s a massive bullish candlestick—don’t get too hyped.

It could just be a bluff by the whales.

Keep an eye on sustained volume: if it’s been low for six months and then suddenly spikes, that’s a genuine accumulation signal.

Trading crypto is about understanding the market psychology; volume leads price.

Just looking at the candlesticks won’t win you trades; you need to watch how people are reacting.

Volume is the mirror reflecting emotions.

Price is the dog led by emotions, while volume is the leash.

Before PEPE skyrocketed in 2025, on-chain trading volume rose for 7 days straight, over 200%—once volume moves, price goes wild.

Understand just one of these five points, and you’re already on the path to becoming a winner.

Nail three of them, and you can crush 90% of the retail crowd.

If you don’t want to be led around by the big players every day and want steadier opportunities—
follow Ming Ge. Daily market signals and strategies laid out in advance.
If you’re going to trade, trade like the big players. @Ming_铭哥
In three months, turning 500K U into 1.69M U, he did three things. Today a fan sent me a screenshot, account total assets at 1.692M U, with a daily profit of 29K U. Three months ago, he came to me, and his account was just over 500K U, scared to even check the charts. He said: "Bro, should I just call it quits?" I went through his trading records, and the issues were three: over-leveraging, holding onto losing trades, and fidgeting with too many trades. I told him: "Don’t panic, follow my three tips, and first, just survive." First, split the cash. 500K U divided into three parts: 200K for day trading: make one or two trades daily, cash out after gaining three to five percent. 200K for swing trading: wait for a 4-hour trend to form before jumping in. 100K as survival funds: absolutely no touch. At first, he thought it was too slow. $DASH $RIVER I asked: "Where did your previous speed get you?" He went silent. Second, only trade what you understand; if there’s no signal, stay in cash and wait for a clear trend before moving. After learning to go cash, he avoided two significant dips in the first week. Later, during an ETH pullback, he took a small position at a daily support level, held for a few days, and made over 80K U in one trade. He told me: "Turns out, making money doesn’t have to rely on luck." Third, stick to the discipline. Stop-loss at 1.5%, cut it if it hits. If profits exceed 4%, take half off the table. Never average down on losses. The first time he hit a stop-loss, his hands shook. I asked: "You waiting for liquidation?" He gritted his teeth and cut it. The next day, that coin dropped another 10%. He messaged me saying: "That cut was worth it." Three months later, 500K U turned into 1.69M U. Today, his account shows a daily unrealized profit of 29K; when he sent me the screenshot, his hands were shaking. I said: "Don’t get cocky; take half of that profit out, let the rest keep rolling." Small capital isn’t scary; what’s scary is always wanting to hit a home run. Following these three rules steadily, 1.69M is just the beginning. If you want to come along steadily, hit me up to chat. @MG59991
In three months, turning 500K U into 1.69M U, he did three things.

Today a fan sent me a screenshot, account total assets at 1.692M U, with a daily profit of 29K U.

Three months ago, he came to me, and his account was just over 500K U, scared to even check the charts.

He said: "Bro, should I just call it quits?"

I went through his trading records, and the issues were three: over-leveraging, holding onto losing trades, and fidgeting with too many trades.

I told him: "Don’t panic, follow my three tips, and first, just survive."

First, split the cash.
500K U divided into three parts:
200K for day trading: make one or two trades daily, cash out after gaining three to five percent.
200K for swing trading: wait for a 4-hour trend to form before jumping in.
100K as survival funds: absolutely no touch.

At first, he thought it was too slow. $DASH $RIVER

I asked: "Where did your previous speed get you?" He went silent.

Second, only trade what you understand; if there’s no signal, stay in cash and wait for a clear trend before moving.

After learning to go cash, he avoided two significant dips in the first week.

Later, during an ETH pullback, he took a small position at a daily support level, held for a few days, and made over 80K U in one trade.

He told me: "Turns out, making money doesn’t have to rely on luck."

Third, stick to the discipline.

Stop-loss at 1.5%, cut it if it hits.

If profits exceed 4%, take half off the table.

Never average down on losses.

The first time he hit a stop-loss, his hands shook.

I asked: "You waiting for liquidation?" He gritted his teeth and cut it.

The next day, that coin dropped another 10%. He messaged me saying: "That cut was worth it."

Three months later,

500K U turned into 1.69M U.

Today, his account shows a daily unrealized profit of 29K; when he sent me the screenshot, his hands were shaking.

I said: "Don’t get cocky; take half of that profit out, let the rest keep rolling."

Small capital isn’t scary; what’s scary is always wanting to hit a home run.

Following these three rules steadily, 1.69M is just the beginning.

If you want to come along steadily, hit me up to chat. @Ming_铭哥
With less than 5000U in your capital, hold your horses before diving in $RAVE To be blunt, if you're rushing in, you're just handing money to the market. In crypto, it's not about who has the biggest balls, but who can last the longest. With smaller capital, you need to play it safe. A true story Last year, I guided a newbie who entered with 800U, hands shaking while placing orders. $RIVER Following my strategy: In 4 months, he reached 19,000U In 6 months, he hit 28,000U Not once did he get liquidated It's not that he was super smart, he just followed the right method. $ZEC If you want to flip small funds, here are three rules: First, split your capital into three parts One part for short trades, take profits quickly One part for swing trading, catch the trend The last part stays put, waiting for extreme market conditions to save you Second, only trade with the trend, avoid choppy markets 80% of the time, if there are no signals, sit on your hands. Take out half your profits first; securing gains feels good. Third, discipline beats luck Cut losses when they hit your stop-loss Reduce positions when profits reach your target Never average down on losing trades Once emotions take over, liquidation is just around the corner. To be honest Going from 800U to 28,000U isn't about gambling; it's about rules, patience, and self-control. Before, you were fumbling in the dark, now I've lit the way for you. Whether you follow or not, that's your choice. @MG59991
With less than 5000U in your capital, hold your horses before diving in $RAVE

To be blunt, if you're rushing in, you're just handing money to the market.

In crypto, it's not about who has the biggest balls, but who can last the longest.

With smaller capital, you need to play it safe.

A true story

Last year, I guided a newbie who entered with 800U, hands shaking while placing orders. $RIVER

Following my strategy:
In 4 months, he reached 19,000U
In 6 months, he hit 28,000U
Not once did he get liquidated
It's not that he was super smart, he just followed the right method. $ZEC

If you want to flip small funds, here are three rules:

First, split your capital into three parts
One part for short trades, take profits quickly
One part for swing trading, catch the trend
The last part stays put, waiting for extreme market conditions to save you

Second, only trade with the trend, avoid choppy markets
80% of the time, if there are no signals, sit on your hands.
Take out half your profits first; securing gains feels good.

Third, discipline beats luck
Cut losses when they hit your stop-loss
Reduce positions when profits reach your target
Never average down on losing trades
Once emotions take over, liquidation is just around the corner.

To be honest

Going from 800U to 28,000U isn't about gambling; it's about rules, patience, and self-control.

Before, you were fumbling in the dark, now I've lit the way for you.

Whether you follow or not, that's your choice. @Ming_铭哥
In the crypto market, going from 10k to 1M, there’s definitely a method to the madness$RAVE Here are 9 hands-on tips I’ve learned through blood, sweat, and tears. Master these, and you too can snag your first 1M. Don’t be greedy, just ride a big wave$TRADOOR Your chips are limited, so capturing one major move each day is already a win. Don’t think you can hold positions forever and keep raking in profits; that’s unrealistic. Sell on good news the same day, don’t hesitate If you encounter significant positive news and don’t cash out the same day, you better get out the next day when it opens high. Good news often signals a temporary top; don’t wait for a pullback to regret it. Take news and holidays seriously Before major events, reduce your position or go flat. Wait until the market clarifies before jumping in; it’s better to be safe than sorry$RIVER For mid to long-term, keep positions light and take it slow Slow accumulation is the way to go. Jumping in heavy right away can mess with your mindset. Short-term trading is all about quick in and out When you see the opportunity, act decisively; if the market turns, get out immediately. Hesitation will only lead to losses. Follow the rhythm of the market Market movements can sometimes be as slow as a snail, and at other times as fast as lightning. Don’t overthink it, just go with the flow. If your entry point is off, cut your losses, don’t hold Holding on will only increase your losses. Setting a stop-loss isn’t admitting defeat; it’s about protecting your capital. In short-term trading, use tools to your advantage 15-minute candlesticks and the KDJ indicator can help you find better entry points. Seize the opportunity, don’t let it slip away. Mindset is everything Volatility in crypto is the norm, and it can be shockingly high. Only by staying calm can you endure and profit in the long run. If you master these tricks, the crypto market can become your wealth springboard.@MG59991
In the crypto market, going from 10k to 1M, there’s definitely a method to the madness$RAVE

Here are 9 hands-on tips I’ve learned through blood, sweat, and tears. Master these, and you too can snag your first 1M.

Don’t be greedy, just ride a big wave$TRADOOR

Your chips are limited, so capturing one major move each day is already a win.

Don’t think you can hold positions forever and keep raking in profits; that’s unrealistic.

Sell on good news the same day, don’t hesitate

If you encounter significant positive news and don’t cash out the same day, you better get out the next day when it opens high. Good news often signals a temporary top; don’t wait for a pullback to regret it.

Take news and holidays seriously
Before major events, reduce your position or go flat. Wait until the market clarifies before jumping in; it’s better to be safe than sorry$RIVER

For mid to long-term, keep positions light and take it slow
Slow accumulation is the way to go. Jumping in heavy right away can mess with your mindset.

Short-term trading is all about quick in and out
When you see the opportunity, act decisively; if the market turns, get out immediately. Hesitation will only lead to losses.

Follow the rhythm of the market
Market movements can sometimes be as slow as a snail, and at other times as fast as lightning. Don’t overthink it, just go with the flow.

If your entry point is off, cut your losses, don’t hold

Holding on will only increase your losses. Setting a stop-loss isn’t admitting defeat; it’s about protecting your capital.

In short-term trading, use tools to your advantage
15-minute candlesticks and the KDJ indicator can help you find better entry points. Seize the opportunity, don’t let it slip away.

Mindset is everything
Volatility in crypto is the norm, and it can be shockingly high. Only by staying calm can you endure and profit in the long run.

If you master these tricks, the crypto market can become your wealth springboard.@Ming_铭哥
From 10k to 1M: In the crypto space, it's all about strategy, not luck $RAVE A lot of people dive into crypto thinking they’ll double their money quickly and get rich overnight. What ends up happening? They either get trapped or get liquidated. The opportunities are always there; it’s just that most folks can’t find the right approach. I know a newbie who only had 10k USDT. At first, he was like most people, glued to the charts, chasing pumps and dumps, getting liquidated every few days, nearly losing his mind. Eventually, I told him to set aside his anxiety, get his mindset right, and rethink his strategy. I said, making money in crypto isn’t about frantically placing trades but about catching the market's rhythm, locking in profits, and controlling risk. $TRADOOR When the market is slow, you take it slow; when it’s fast, you follow the trend, but don’t go head-to-head. When a big event or positive news hits, pull back first and wait for the direction to clarify before jumping in. That way, even if you make a mistake, your losses won’t be too heavy. For short-term trades, be decisive in entering and quick in exiting; don’t be greedy for that last bit of profit. For mid to long-term positions, build your stack lightly, giving yourself room to maneuver so your positions can hold steady. You must control losses well; set your stop-losses; a loss should just be a small hit, not something that affects your mindset. When you’re in profit, take it in chunks, let compound interest do its work; this is way better than staring at the charts and overtrading every day. Those with a steady mindset can survive even the wildest market swings and slowly build small funds into large ones. That newbie followed my advice for a few months and steadily grew his 10k to over 200k, then to 500k, and his account is still growing stable. The best part is he doesn’t have to stay up all night watching the charts anymore; his mental state has improved a lot. He often tells me: I used to think making money was about luck, now I understand it’s all about strategy and patience. There are truly many opportunities in crypto; what’s really missing are people who can operate steadily according to the rules. Stop trying to shoulder everything on your own; walking the dark path alone is too risky. Join me, and let’s learn the core entry points, stop-loss logic, and smart money strategies together; stable profits are completely achievable. @MG59991
From 10k to 1M: In the crypto space, it's all about strategy, not luck $RAVE

A lot of people dive into crypto thinking they’ll double their money quickly and get rich overnight. What ends up happening? They either get trapped or get liquidated.

The opportunities are always there; it’s just that most folks can’t find the right approach.

I know a newbie who only had 10k USDT. At first, he was like most people, glued to the charts, chasing pumps and dumps, getting liquidated every few days, nearly losing his mind.

Eventually, I told him to set aside his anxiety, get his mindset right, and rethink his strategy.

I said, making money in crypto isn’t about frantically placing trades but about catching the market's rhythm, locking in profits, and controlling risk. $TRADOOR

When the market is slow, you take it slow; when it’s fast, you follow the trend, but don’t go head-to-head.

When a big event or positive news hits, pull back first and wait for the direction to clarify before jumping in.

That way, even if you make a mistake, your losses won’t be too heavy.

For short-term trades, be decisive in entering and quick in exiting; don’t be greedy for that last bit of profit.

For mid to long-term positions, build your stack lightly, giving yourself room to maneuver so your positions can hold steady.

You must control losses well; set your stop-losses; a loss should just be a small hit, not something that affects your mindset.

When you’re in profit, take it in chunks, let compound interest do its work; this is way better than staring at the charts and overtrading every day.

Those with a steady mindset can survive even the wildest market swings and slowly build small funds into large ones.

That newbie followed my advice for a few months and steadily grew his 10k to over 200k, then to 500k, and his account is still growing stable.

The best part is he doesn’t have to stay up all night watching the charts anymore; his mental state has improved a lot.

He often tells me: I used to think making money was about luck, now I understand it’s all about strategy and patience.

There are truly many opportunities in crypto; what’s really missing are people who can operate steadily according to the rules.

Stop trying to shoulder everything on your own; walking the dark path alone is too risky.

Join me, and let’s learn the core entry points, stop-loss logic, and smart money strategies together; stable profits are completely achievable. @Ming_铭哥
30k in, liquidation to zero, sleepless with debt. Later, restarted with 1500U, slowly rolled it to over 50 million. It's not about having a gift; it's the 9 lives earned through 8 years of stepping into pitfalls. Today, I’ll share it all with you—no need to thank me. 1. Small funds, learn to survive first. With little capital, don't think about flipping it overnight. Check the big market once a day, take a bite and walk away. Those going all-in are buried under 2-meter tall grass. $MYX 2. Run when good news drops. $COAI If you didn't exit on the day the good news hit, you must run at the high opening the next day. Don't be the last one standing guard at the top of the mountain; it's windy up there. 3. News and long holidays are deadly. Before major news drops or before long holidays, reduce your position or go to cash. When the direction is unclear, doing nothing is winning. 4. For mid to long-term, light positions are key. Those with heavy positions talk about faith, while those with light positions laugh last. Liquidation never occurs because of a wrong call; it happens because of too much leverage. 5. Short-term trading boils down to one word: fast. Enter when the direction is clear, exit when the target is hit. If there's no market, take a break—don’t get itchy fingers. 6. Watch the rhythm, don't rely on fantasies. Coins that rise slowly also fall slowly; those that spike can drop in a blink. The market has its own temperament; don't stubbornly resist it. 7. If you're wrong, cut your losses; don’t hold on. Stop-loss isn't admitting defeat; it's saving your own skin. Those who stubbornly hold on eventually lose everything. 8. 15-minute candlesticks are enough. Short-term trading is all about rhythm and execution, not fancy indicators. Mastering the simple is better than learning a hundred models. 9. In the end, it’s about mindset. Your skills determine how much you earn, and your emotions determine how long you last. Those who can’t control their hands will be transient wealth, no matter how much they earn. I transformed from a gambler to a trader, and it wasn't because of one lucky strike. It was about learning to control my position size, stop-loss, and emotions. The market is always there. Those who make it to the end aren't the smartest, but the ones who follow the rules. @MG59991
30k in, liquidation to zero, sleepless with debt. Later, restarted with 1500U, slowly rolled it to over 50 million.

It's not about having a gift; it's the 9 lives earned through 8 years of stepping into pitfalls. Today, I’ll share it all with you—no need to thank me.

1. Small funds, learn to survive first.
With little capital, don't think about flipping it overnight. Check the big market once a day, take a bite and walk away. Those going all-in are buried under 2-meter tall grass. $MYX

2. Run when good news drops. $COAI
If you didn't exit on the day the good news hit, you must run at the high opening the next day. Don't be the last one standing guard at the top of the mountain; it's windy up there.

3. News and long holidays are deadly.
Before major news drops or before long holidays, reduce your position or go to cash. When the direction is unclear, doing nothing is winning.

4. For mid to long-term, light positions are key.
Those with heavy positions talk about faith, while those with light positions laugh last. Liquidation never occurs because of a wrong call; it happens because of too much leverage.

5. Short-term trading boils down to one word: fast.
Enter when the direction is clear, exit when the target is hit. If there's no market, take a break—don’t get itchy fingers.

6. Watch the rhythm, don't rely on fantasies.
Coins that rise slowly also fall slowly; those that spike can drop in a blink. The market has its own temperament; don't stubbornly resist it.

7. If you're wrong, cut your losses; don’t hold on.
Stop-loss isn't admitting defeat; it's saving your own skin. Those who stubbornly hold on eventually lose everything.

8. 15-minute candlesticks are enough.
Short-term trading is all about rhythm and execution, not fancy indicators. Mastering the simple is better than learning a hundred models.

9. In the end, it’s about mindset.
Your skills determine how much you earn, and your emotions determine how long you last. Those who can’t control their hands will be transient wealth, no matter how much they earn.

I transformed from a gambler to a trader, and it wasn't because of one lucky strike.
It was about learning to control my position size, stop-loss, and emotions.
The market is always there. Those who make it to the end aren't the smartest, but the ones who follow the rules. @Ming_铭哥
Liquidation isn't about bad luck; it's about not understanding what true rolling is. I've seen too many people trade contracts: They panic and exit at a 10% rise, missing out on a million-dollar rally. They frantically average down during a crash, ending up with nothing left. They clearly have the right big picture but get shaken out by a 5% pullback. After checking out the strategy below, you might slap your knee: Turns out the pros are doing the opposite. 1. 90% of people don't understand rolling. ❌ Misconception Rolling = adding to floating profits → going all in → getting rich 👉 Result: One pullback wipes you out. ✅ Truth The essence of rolling is: to use profits to take risks. The core is three statements: Principal is always safe. Averaging down must wait for key levels to break. Only the profit portion gets rolled in. Ordinary folks: Bottom-fish → Average down → Liquidation. Pros: Probe → Confirm → Roll profits $MYX . 2. Inverted Pyramid Rolling Strategy · Practical Demonstration Let’s say you have a 10,000 USDT principal and are preparing for a Bitcoin crash: Phase 1: Opening a Test Position Only open 500 USDT with 100x leverage → Equivalent to a 50,000 USDT position. Set the stop-loss at the entry point +2%. Key: Must wait for the three-color signal to act. Phase 2: Rolling in Profits When profits hit 50% of the initial position: Take 50% of the profit for the first add-on. When the price breaks below the previous low, Then take 70% of the remaining profits for the second add-on. Phase 3: Crazy Market When floating profits exceed the principal: Initiate hedging protection. When the crash accelerates, Activate ghost positions #加密市场回暖 . Final Result: 10,000 USDT principal → Caught a 30% crash → Made 48,000 USDT. Lastly, here's a heartfelt thought: The market serves justice to all, but always rewards those who use the right methods. Next Episode Preview: Bleeding in a choppy market with a whale mentality — 90% of your profits actually come from the market movements you don't understand. @MG59991
Liquidation isn't about bad luck; it's about not understanding what true rolling is.

I've seen too many people trade contracts:
They panic and exit at a 10% rise, missing out on a million-dollar rally.
They frantically average down during a crash, ending up with nothing left.
They clearly have the right big picture but get shaken out by a 5% pullback.

After checking out the strategy below, you might slap your knee:
Turns out the pros are doing the opposite.

1. 90% of people don't understand rolling.
❌ Misconception
Rolling = adding to floating profits → going all in → getting rich
👉 Result: One pullback wipes you out.
✅ Truth
The essence of rolling is: to use profits to take risks.

The core is three statements:
Principal is always safe.
Averaging down must wait for key levels to break.
Only the profit portion gets rolled in.
Ordinary folks: Bottom-fish → Average down → Liquidation.
Pros: Probe → Confirm → Roll profits $MYX .

2. Inverted Pyramid Rolling Strategy · Practical Demonstration
Let’s say you have a 10,000 USDT principal and are preparing for a Bitcoin crash:

Phase 1: Opening a Test Position
Only open 500 USDT with 100x leverage → Equivalent to a 50,000 USDT position.
Set the stop-loss at the entry point +2%.
Key: Must wait for the three-color signal to act.

Phase 2: Rolling in Profits
When profits hit 50% of the initial position:
Take 50% of the profit for the first add-on.
When the price breaks below the previous low,
Then take 70% of the remaining profits for the second add-on.

Phase 3: Crazy Market
When floating profits exceed the principal:
Initiate hedging protection.
When the crash accelerates,
Activate ghost positions #加密市场回暖 .

Final Result:
10,000 USDT principal → Caught a 30% crash → Made 48,000 USDT.

Lastly, here's a heartfelt thought:
The market serves justice to all, but always rewards those who use the right methods.

Next Episode Preview:
Bleeding in a choppy market with a whale mentality —
90% of your profits actually come from the market movements you don't understand. @Ming_铭哥
With less than 2000U in capital, do you still want to turn things around in the crypto space? $RAVE Let me hit you with some hard truths: Your primary focus right now shouldn’t be on 'how to earn', but rather on how to avoid going to zero. Two years ago, I witnessed a hardcore trader. Starting with 1500U, he grew it to 67,000 in six months, without ever blowing a position. What was the key? $MYX His methods were so simple it made me laugh, yet so steady it scared me. Today, I’ll break down his three strategies for you. First Strategy: Don’t break the capital; you’re just handing out free kills to the market $COAI How to play with 1500U? He split it into three parts: 500U for day trading: a maximum of one trade per day, done and dusted. 500U for swing trading: if there are no signals, just chill on the account. 500U as a safety net: no matter how good the market looks, don’t touch it. Those fully invested look aggressive but are actually cutting off their escape routes. Diversifying may sound timid, but when liquidation hits — while others go to zero, you still have a shot. Second Strategy: No matter how thick the meat, don’t reach for what isn’t yours. He had a saying on his screen that really stuck with me: Don’t trade in sideways markets; if the direction is unclear, stay out. How do 80% of traders end up losing? They get wrecked in the chop, getting hit back and forth. He only traded three or four clear trends a year, spending the rest of the time as a spectator. Trends aren’t daily occurrences, but your capital must remain intact every day. I’m passing this wisdom on to you. Third Strategy: Clear your emotions, cement your rules. He set hard rules for himself: A 2% stop-loss; once hit, he cuts it off without hesitation. No gambling, no holding on, no fantasizing — just these three rules. Ninety percent can’t stick to it, which is why ninety percent never make it. Now his account is well over 100,000. But what I envy most isn’t that. It’s that he no longer has to stay up all night watching the charts. Five minutes a day, checking positions, shutting down the computer, and going to sleep. For those wanting to turn things around, engrave these words in your mind: As long as the capital stays alive, you have the right to talk about doubling. Diversify, wait for the right moment, control your drawdowns. These ideas aren’t thrilling; no one wants to hear them when spoken. But they can save you three years of detours and prevent you from losing a whole house. I’m Xu Ge, no hype, no boasting, just focusing on survival in real trading. There are even more detailed strategies: How to identify 'understandable trends'? What signals are real opportunities? How to adjust positions dynamically? It can’t be explained in one or two sentences. #加密市场回暖 It’s easy to get lost alone, but together, we can tread steadily.
With less than 2000U in capital, do you still want to turn things around in the crypto space? $RAVE

Let me hit you with some hard truths:
Your primary focus right now shouldn’t be on 'how to earn', but rather on how to avoid going to zero.

Two years ago, I witnessed a hardcore trader.
Starting with 1500U, he grew it to 67,000 in six months, without ever blowing a position.

What was the key? $MYX

His methods were so simple it made me laugh, yet so steady it scared me.

Today, I’ll break down his three strategies for you.

First Strategy: Don’t break the capital; you’re just handing out free kills to the market $COAI

How to play with 1500U? He split it into three parts:
500U for day trading: a maximum of one trade per day, done and dusted.
500U for swing trading: if there are no signals, just chill on the account.
500U as a safety net: no matter how good the market looks, don’t touch it.

Those fully invested look aggressive but are actually cutting off their escape routes.

Diversifying may sound timid, but when liquidation hits — while others go to zero, you still have a shot.

Second Strategy: No matter how thick the meat, don’t reach for what isn’t yours.

He had a saying on his screen that really stuck with me:

Don’t trade in sideways markets; if the direction is unclear, stay out.

How do 80% of traders end up losing?

They get wrecked in the chop, getting hit back and forth.

He only traded three or four clear trends a year, spending the rest of the time as a spectator.

Trends aren’t daily occurrences, but your capital must remain intact every day.

I’m passing this wisdom on to you.

Third Strategy: Clear your emotions, cement your rules.

He set hard rules for himself:
A 2% stop-loss; once hit, he cuts it off without hesitation.

No gambling, no holding on, no fantasizing — just these three rules.

Ninety percent can’t stick to it, which is why ninety percent never make it.

Now his account is well over 100,000.

But what I envy most isn’t that.

It’s that he no longer has to stay up all night watching the charts.

Five minutes a day, checking positions, shutting down the computer, and going to sleep.

For those wanting to turn things around, engrave these words in your mind:

As long as the capital stays alive, you have the right to talk about doubling.

Diversify, wait for the right moment, control your drawdowns.

These ideas aren’t thrilling; no one wants to hear them when spoken.

But they can save you three years of detours and prevent you from losing a whole house.

I’m Xu Ge, no hype, no boasting, just focusing on survival in real trading.

There are even more detailed strategies:

How to identify 'understandable trends'? What signals are real opportunities? How to adjust positions dynamically?

It can’t be explained in one or two sentences. #加密市场回暖

It’s easy to get lost alone, but together, we can tread steadily.
I helped him roll from 1500U up to 23,000U, but in the end, I still blocked him. $RAVE He was following friends in the group to chase shitcoins, losing everything three times in two days, even putting his rent at risk. I didn't teach him to read candlesticks, just set three hard rules. Four months later, his account hit 23,000U. But ultimately, I still blacklisted him. $MYX First hard rule: Split your funds into three I divided his 800U into three parts: 300U for day trading: only open one position a day, close it after making 5% 300U waiting for opportunities: never enter unless it hits support 200U locked as 'emergency funds': don’t touch it even if the sky falls At first, he grumbled, "With this little capital, when can I ever make it big?" Until he witnessed a colleague's all-in contract evaporate in an instant, he quietly opened the batch order interface. Second rule: Only bite the main uptrend, not the choppy bones The market is trash 70% of the time. I told him to hit the gym during consolidations. Once ADA was sideways for a week, he asked me in the middle of the night: "Should we set a trap?" I simply replied, "Wait for volume." The next morning, a big bullish candle broke out, and we caught an 18% rise. That’s when he understood: "Not moving is ten times harder than moving randomly." For every profit exceeding 15%, I forced him to transfer one-third to his bank account. The numbers on the screen are nowhere near as solid as the SMS notification. Third and most crucial: Let the system handle it Set a 3% stop-loss on every trade, auto-close if hit If profit exceeds 8%, immediately move the stop-loss to break even Once he traded LTC, missing the stop-loss by 0.5%, he wanted to cancel the order. I directly sent him a screenshot of his liquidation record from three months ago. That night, LTC plummeted by 12%. He stared at the only 1% loss in his account, realizing for the first time: Cutting losses is the real safety net. But when his account surpassed 20,000U, he got cocky. He started hanging out in signal groups, mocking others for being 'too timid to make big bucks'. He even leveraged to the max chasing MEME coins. After half of his capital was wiped out, he sent me a long message at dawn: "If I had gone all-in back then, I’d be at 50,000 by now." I scrolled through our chat history and found his earlier message—"Thanks, bro, for teaching me risk management." I suddenly realized: The market doesn’t eliminate the poor, it only wipes out reckless gamblers. Before deleting him, I sent one last message: From 1500 to 23,000, it was not the market, it was the rules. Rules can keep you alive, but arrogance can wipe you back to zero. Discipline is the fundamental key to survival. @MG59991
I helped him roll from 1500U up to 23,000U, but in the end, I still blocked him. $RAVE

He was following friends in the group to chase shitcoins, losing everything three times in two days, even putting his rent at risk.

I didn't teach him to read candlesticks, just set three hard rules.

Four months later, his account hit 23,000U.

But ultimately, I still blacklisted him. $MYX

First hard rule: Split your funds into three
I divided his 800U into three parts:
300U for day trading: only open one position a day, close it after making 5%
300U waiting for opportunities: never enter unless it hits support
200U locked as 'emergency funds': don’t touch it even if the sky falls
At first, he grumbled, "With this little capital, when can I ever make it big?"
Until he witnessed a colleague's all-in contract evaporate in an instant, he quietly opened the batch order interface.

Second rule: Only bite the main uptrend, not the choppy bones
The market is trash 70% of the time.
I told him to hit the gym during consolidations.
Once ADA was sideways for a week, he asked me in the middle of the night: "Should we set a trap?"
I simply replied, "Wait for volume."
The next morning, a big bullish candle broke out, and we caught an 18% rise.
That’s when he understood: "Not moving is ten times harder than moving randomly."
For every profit exceeding 15%, I forced him to transfer one-third to his bank account.
The numbers on the screen are nowhere near as solid as the SMS notification.

Third and most crucial: Let the system handle it
Set a 3% stop-loss on every trade, auto-close if hit
If profit exceeds 8%, immediately move the stop-loss to break even
Once he traded LTC, missing the stop-loss by 0.5%, he wanted to cancel the order.
I directly sent him a screenshot of his liquidation record from three months ago.
That night, LTC plummeted by 12%.
He stared at the only 1% loss in his account, realizing for the first time:
Cutting losses is the real safety net.

But when his account surpassed 20,000U, he got cocky.
He started hanging out in signal groups, mocking others for being 'too timid to make big bucks'.
He even leveraged to the max chasing MEME coins.

After half of his capital was wiped out, he sent me a long message at dawn:
"If I had gone all-in back then, I’d be at 50,000 by now."

I scrolled through our chat history and found his earlier message—"Thanks, bro, for teaching me risk management."
I suddenly realized:
The market doesn’t eliminate the poor, it only wipes out reckless gamblers.

Before deleting him, I sent one last message:
From 1500 to 23,000, it was not the market, it was the rules.
Rules can keep you alive, but arrogance can wipe you back to zero.
Discipline is the fundamental key to survival. @Ming_铭哥
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