After seven years in the cryptocurrency market, I’ve watched wave after wave of people rush in—and then leave, battered and defeated. $MDT



Whenever someone asks me why they always lose money, I tell them four things—lessons I learned at the cost of countless liquidations. Almost everyone who loses money falls into these four traps.

**Trap One: Out-of-control trading frequency.**

Some people treat this place like an arcade, thinking that not trading is a wasted opportunity. They stare at the candlestick charts, jumping in and out a dozen times a day. It looks like they’re catching every move, but in reality? Fees and slippage quietly shrink their capital by 30%. The truly valuable opportunities require patience. The more you want to “do more,” the more the market will teach you a painful lesson.

**Trap Two: Heavy positions with high leverage.**

Many people come in hoping for one big win, putting 80% of their capital into a single coin and then leveraging it 10 to 20 times. I know a guy who multiplied his stack several times using leverage, then went all-in on an altcoin. The project team disappeared, and he lost everything overnight. Leverage amplifies gains, but it amplifies losses even more—if the market moves 5% against you, you could be wiped out.

**Trap Three: Taking profits too early, holding on to losses.**

This is the most common psychological trap. People rush to pocket a 5% gain but refuse to admit defeat when they’re down 30%, still hoping for a rebound. Some even add to their position after breaking through key support, ending up with an 80% loss and no capital left to recover. The market never punishes you for taking profits too early—only for cutting losses too late.

**Trap Four: Never setting a stop-loss.**

Too many people trade purely on instinct, never planning for risk in advance, always thinking “the market will go my way.” But nothing is guaranteed in crypto. One sudden negative event, one big crash, and your position is cut in half. Not setting a stop-loss is like driving without a seatbelt—it’s fine until something goes wrong, and then it’s fatal.

The survivors I know all treat stop-losses as an iron rule. Even if they occasionally get shaken out, it’s a hundred times better than getting liquidated.

To put it simply, the logic for making money in this market isn’t complicated:

Reduce unnecessary trades, stay away from high leverage, learn to take profits and cut losses, and respect risk.

As long as you still have your capital, you always have a chance to see a profitable day.
MDT25.3%
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SchroedingerMinervip
· 7h ago
I think out of the four pitfalls this guy mentioned, the third one hits the hardest: taking profits and running when you win, but holding on and refusing to sell when you lose. A bunch of people around me are like this. Cutting losses sounds easy, but very few can actually do it. I only understood after suffering major losses myself. Honestly, I'll never touch leverage again. Sure, you can bounce back fast, but you can crash even faster. This article might sound like the same old advice, but it’s the real truth. Everyone who survives in the crypto space plays it this way.
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LiquidityLarryvip
· 16h ago
The people manipulating the candlestick charts have really turned themselves into the sheep being fleeced, making more than a dozen trades a day and getting their profits eaten up by hefty transaction fees.
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ETHReserveBankvip
· 16h ago
Ha, sounds nice, but basically it just means don’t be greedy and don’t gamble with your life. After all that talk, it still comes down to this one sentence. After following for so many years, I’ve noticed that the ones who survive are indeed these kinds of people—not very exciting, but they last the longest.
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WalletDivorcervip
· 16h ago
No matter how right someone is, it’s useless—ultimately, you have to get liquidated yourself once to truly realize it.
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unrekt.ethvip
· 16h ago
Honestly, I've already been through frequent trading, and the fees ate up half my profits. Leverage traders will meet sooner or later, it's just a matter of time. Those who keep holding onto losses all have mindset problems—is it really that hard to admit defeat? Stop-loss is like insurance; it costs money, but it can save your life.
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BearEatsAllvip
· 17h ago
Finished reading. Honestly, it's the same old story. I've heard about stop-loss so many times, but I just can't execute it...
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DeFiChefvip
· 17h ago
That's so true. I'm exactly the person who keeps watching the charts every day until I've burned through all my funds on fees. Now I've finally realized it.
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