But I've been holding this in for a long time, and I have to say it today.
Three months ago, I brought in a complete novice to get started, with an initial capital of only 1200U. Yesterday, she sent me a screenshot—her account has already grown to 51,200U, all without a single liquidation. $NEO also benefited from this market rally.
How was this possible? It wasn't all-in gambling, nor was it luck hitting a bull market. Honestly, it was just about executing the three simplest principles in trading properly.
**The first principle is very basic: diversify your funds.** Split your capital into three parts; don't expect to go all-in at once. This way, no matter how brutal the market wipeout, you won't die.
**The second principle tests patience: carefully select opportunities, and rest the rest of the time.** Don't trade every day; only act when a truly lucrative opportunity appears. Most of the time, it's just watching the charts, taking notes, and waiting.
**The third principle is the most challenging: write down your strategy and let emotions take a back seat.** Pre-mark your entry points, stop-loss points, and take-profit points. Once triggered, execute mechanically—no room for changing your mind.
Looking back, what mistakes are new traders most likely to make?
· Getting scared by 5U, 10U fluctuations and their hearts racing · FOMO-ing in after seeing others make money · Operating without a plan, relying solely on intuition
All three of these pitfalls can actually be avoided in advance.
Avoiding three years of detours is more valuable than tripling your capital.
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NotFinancialAdvice
· 01-08 06:58
1200 to 51200? Man, how strong of a heart do you need to hold on? I need to learn from you.
View OriginalReply0
OfflineNewbie
· 01-07 23:48
I believed in this system 42 days ago, and my account is still in a loss mode. Maybe I am just the chosen one.
View OriginalReply0
OnChain_Detective
· 01-05 07:30
hold up... 42x gains in 3 months with zero liquidations? lemme pull the on-chain data on this one because that pattern screams statistical anomaly to me ngl
Reply0
SchrodingersPaper
· 01-05 07:30
Wait a minute... 1200U to 51200U? NGL, these numbers are a bit outrageous. I feel like I'm reading a novel... But those three principles really hit the mark, especially the third one. I'm actually a bad example myself—every time I set a stop-loss point, a wave of correction happens, and I change my mind. And then... you all know the result, right?
View OriginalReply0
NftBankruptcyClub
· 01-05 07:29
1200U has been turned into over 50,000, which sounds unbelievable but also makes some sense... However, how many people actually implement these three points?
I've known about diversified allocation for a long time, but the problem is that I get itchy whenever the market moves. I feel uneasy if I don't make a move within 5 minutes, haha
View OriginalReply0
MEVictim
· 01-05 07:16
Alright, this story sounds too good to be true, but decentralization of funds is indeed the truth. I also learned this after taking many detours myself.
#数字资产动态追踪 It's a bit embarrassing to say.
But I've been holding this in for a long time, and I have to say it today.
Three months ago, I brought in a complete novice to get started, with an initial capital of only 1200U. Yesterday, she sent me a screenshot—her account has already grown to 51,200U, all without a single liquidation. $NEO also benefited from this market rally.
How was this possible? It wasn't all-in gambling, nor was it luck hitting a bull market. Honestly, it was just about executing the three simplest principles in trading properly.
**The first principle is very basic: diversify your funds.** Split your capital into three parts; don't expect to go all-in at once. This way, no matter how brutal the market wipeout, you won't die.
**The second principle tests patience: carefully select opportunities, and rest the rest of the time.** Don't trade every day; only act when a truly lucrative opportunity appears. Most of the time, it's just watching the charts, taking notes, and waiting.
**The third principle is the most challenging: write down your strategy and let emotions take a back seat.** Pre-mark your entry points, stop-loss points, and take-profit points. Once triggered, execute mechanically—no room for changing your mind.
Looking back, what mistakes are new traders most likely to make?
· Getting scared by 5U, 10U fluctuations and their hearts racing
· FOMO-ing in after seeing others make money
· Operating without a plan, relying solely on intuition
All three of these pitfalls can actually be avoided in advance.
Avoiding three years of detours is more valuable than tripling your capital.