Meanwhile, here are 3 ready-to-post article drafts (each >500 characters). You can copy/paste into Binance App → Square → Post → Article.

 

Article 1: A Beginner’s Risk Plan for Crypto (So You Don’t Blow Up)

 

Most people don’t lose money in crypto because they picked the “wrong coin”—they lose because they have no plan. Before you buy anything, decide three things: (1) your time horizon (days, months, or years), (2) your maximum loss per trade (for beginners, 1–2% of total capital is plenty), and (3) your exit rules (take-profit and stop-loss). If you can’t explain why you’re buying, you’re gambling. A simple approach is to split funds: a “core” portion for major assets (like BTC/ETH), and a smaller “high-risk” portion for alts. Use limit orders, avoid chasing pumps, and never average down without a clear invalidation level. The goal isn’t to win big once—it’s to stay in the game long enough to learn and compound.

 

Article 2: Spot vs Futures on Binance — What You Should Choose First

 

If you’re new, start with Spot. Spot trading is simple: you buy a coin, you own it. Futures are different: you trade contracts, can use leverage, and liquidation is real. Many beginners jump into Futures because the gains look faster—but the losses are faster too. A smart pathway is: learn Spot basics (order types, support/resistance, risk sizing), then paper-test a strategy, and only then consider Futures with very low leverage (or no leverage). Your edge matters more than your confidence. Futures can be useful for hedging, but if you don’t have strict stop-loss discipline, it becomes emotional trading. In crypto, surviving volatility is a skill—Spot is the best training ground.

 

Article 3: The “3-Layer” Strategy I Use to Avoid Emotional Trading

 

Emotions are expensive in crypto. One method that helps is a 3-layer structure: Layer 1 (Core): long-term holdings you don’t touch often. Layer 2 (Swing): trades based on a plan—entries near support, exits near resistance, with stops placed where your idea is wrong. Layer 3 (Opportunistic): small, high-risk positions (memecoins/new narratives), but strictly limited size so one bad trade can’t hurt you. This structure keeps you from overtrading your long-term bag and stops you from going “all-in” on hype. Track your trades weekly: what you did, why you did it, and whether you followed rules. Consistency beats luck—especially in a market that rewards patience more than prediction.