Following up and renewing subscriptions is indeed high, with a repurchase rate of over 90%. But honestly, I prefer to share more practical trading ideas and operational cases.
The earliest partners who followed along are those who joined gradually last year, and their cumulative returns are quite good. Some even directly renewed for 5 years, which is quite interesting—are you worried that after 5 years, they will already be financially free?
Last month, I placed over 20 orders in contract trading. To be honest, frequent trading is completely unnecessary. The key is the quality of the orders. For example, at the 87,000 level for BTC, we made 10 trades, each time precisely capturing high risk-reward opportunities, doubling the position.
Being caught in spot trading is not the scariest part. The scariest is buying at high levels and still adding to the position recklessly, eventually going all-in. When other coins present opportunities, you’re unable to act. What’s the result? Cutting losses on this coin, then chasing another coin at a high level. A vicious cycle. The solution is actually one word—change. Two weeks ago, our real trading operation was to sell SOL and then position ourselves for Bitcoin or Ethereum.
The easiest trap in contract trading is chaotic position management. Setting stop-losses too narrowly can lead to immediate liquidation. Therefore, you must enter or add positions only at absolutely safe levels. Add to positions when floating profits, but when floating losses occur, you must wait for the left side to add more.
The performance over the past 3 months is here—among mainstream coins, the short-term strategy has a win rate of about 88%, consistently making significant profits.
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CommunityJanitor
· 4h ago
88% win rate, speaking with great confidence. But I really have to admit the SOL to BTC swap operation; the logic behind this round of turnover is indeed clear.
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Frontrunner
· 16h ago
Renewing for 5 years is a bit aggressive, but to be honest, I'm more concerned about how the 88% win rate was calculated compared to that 90% repurchase rate...
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BakedCatFanboy
· 01-04 14:50
A 90% repurchase rate is indeed impressive, but daring to renew for 5 years shows a lot of confidence in oneself... I need to see the 88% win rate with my own eyes to believe it.
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ShitcoinArbitrageur
· 01-04 14:46
90% renewal rate sounds impressive, but the ones who can really make money are still those with a stable holding mindset.
Honestly, hearing about BTC 87000 flip is just for fun; the key still depends on individual risk tolerance.
I've fallen into the full position trap before, it was really heartbreaking haha.
Frequent trading indeed has no meaning; I am now waiting for opportunities, not just the time.
An 88% win rate is a bit too high; did you remove the losing trades?
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DegenGambler
· 01-04 14:43
A 90% repurchase rate is indeed impressive, but why does this number sound so much like marketing talk... That said, the ones truly making a killing are the 1% who understand position management.
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NFTRegretter
· 01-04 14:39
The 90% repurchase rate is definitely impressive, but I'm still a bit skeptical about the 88% win rate... Is it real or fake?
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JustAnotherWallet
· 01-04 14:35
A 90% repurchase rate is indeed incredible, but the key still depends on actual profitability, otherwise it's just on-paper data.
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CompoundPersonality
· 01-04 14:30
A 90% renewal rate is indeed impressive, but I've seen this trick too many times; in the end, it's just the little guys getting exploited by the big guys.
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TokenEconomist
· 01-04 14:23
actually, the 90%+ retention rate is interesting but let me break this down—what you're really observing is survivorship bias mixed with sunk cost fallacy. those 5-year renewals? ceteris paribus, they're locked in by initial gains, not guaranteed future alpha. the key variable here is whether the strategy scales or degrades as market conditions shift.
Following up and renewing subscriptions is indeed high, with a repurchase rate of over 90%. But honestly, I prefer to share more practical trading ideas and operational cases.
The earliest partners who followed along are those who joined gradually last year, and their cumulative returns are quite good. Some even directly renewed for 5 years, which is quite interesting—are you worried that after 5 years, they will already be financially free?
Last month, I placed over 20 orders in contract trading. To be honest, frequent trading is completely unnecessary. The key is the quality of the orders. For example, at the 87,000 level for BTC, we made 10 trades, each time precisely capturing high risk-reward opportunities, doubling the position.
Being caught in spot trading is not the scariest part. The scariest is buying at high levels and still adding to the position recklessly, eventually going all-in. When other coins present opportunities, you’re unable to act. What’s the result? Cutting losses on this coin, then chasing another coin at a high level. A vicious cycle. The solution is actually one word—change. Two weeks ago, our real trading operation was to sell SOL and then position ourselves for Bitcoin or Ethereum.
The easiest trap in contract trading is chaotic position management. Setting stop-losses too narrowly can lead to immediate liquidation. Therefore, you must enter or add positions only at absolutely safe levels. Add to positions when floating profits, but when floating losses occur, you must wait for the left side to add more.
The performance over the past 3 months is here—among mainstream coins, the short-term strategy has a win rate of about 88%, consistently making significant profits.