After so many years in the industry, I've seen too many people stumble in the contract market. Some blow up their accounts, some disappear entirely. But there are also those who survive, and even live more comfortably than ever. I am one of them. Since I started trading in 2018, those early days of losing money really kept me awake at night. But now I’ve stabilized, and each month brings in a decent profit. Honestly, this isn’t about talent or some secret trick; it’s just a set of ridiculously simple methods—yet because they’re simple, executable, and truly effective, I want to share them.
**Fund Safety Is the First Lesson**
No matter how brilliant your trading logic, a single liquidation can wipe everything out. I’ve seen too many smart people, with top strategies, get wiped out by one decision. So the first iron rule is: to make money, you must first stay alive.
What’s the specific approach? Position sizing is fundamental. When I had a capital of 100,000, I only used 10,000 per trade to test. A full position never exceeds 20% of total funds. It sounds conservative, but it’s this conservatism that has helped me avoid many major market reversals.
Don’t overthink stop-losses either. When a single loss hits 2%, I cut immediately—no "wait and see" thoughts. Many people lose their first big gains because they think, "I can hold on."
Regarding leverage, my advice for beginners is simply: don’t use it. If experienced traders do, keep your position below 10x. Most of the blow-ups I know happened at this point. They felt experienced, started increasing leverage, and then a sudden adverse move wiped them out.
**Trade Less, Focus on Quality**
The logic of making money in the market is actually counterintuitive. Many think earning is about "trading more," but in reality, it’s about "trading correctly." A losing trade needs to be offset by multiple winning trades; it’s hard to keep track of that.
Now I prefer one-way trading. Either only long or only short, no switching back and forth. The benefit? Clear thinking and a significantly higher success rate. Playing both sides, especially with high-frequency trades, eats up most of your profits in fees.
Set your stop-loss and take-profit levels before each trade—say, 3% stop-loss and 5% take-profit. These numbers aren’t random; they’re validated through backtesting. Once set, don’t change them. That’s mechanical discipline. Often, on-the-spot judgments are less reliable than mechanical execution because human emotions can interfere.
Control your trading frequency. I’ve observed that the first one or two trades of the day tend to be the highest quality. After the third, the quality drops, and you’re basically just giving away money. So even if I see an opportunity later, if I’ve already traded twice, I’ll hold back.
**The Common Pitfalls for Beginners**
I want to highlight one specific mistake: adding to a losing position against the trend. Every time you top up your position, you’re actually getting closer to liquidation. It’s a math problem, not a psychological game. If your position is at 20%, and the market moves against you, adding more to reach 30%, and then the market continues to go against you… just imagine what happens next.
Unnecessary trades should also be minimized. Frequent trading costs you in fees, which can surprise you after a year. Some realize that their fees eat up most of their profits—that’s embarrassing.
Most importantly, profits are not real until they are realized. Paper gains are meaningless. Most liquidation cases start with the phrase "It should still go up," and then they’re gone. Now, whenever I hit my target profit, I close the position immediately—no greed.
**How Much Can the Outcome Differ with the Same 10,000 Capital?**
Wrong approach: full 100,000 position, leverage, adding to losing trades, holding on, and finally… liquidation.
Right approach: use 20,000 as a base position, which is relatively safe. Strictly follow 3% stop-loss and 5% take-profit, and only trade twice a week—these two trades should be carefully selected high-quality setups.
What’s the result? Monthly returns can be consistently around 8%. With compound interest, annualized returns can reach over 150%. It sounds aggressive, but it’s based on strict discipline.
**The Six Core Principles**
What to do: trade with idle funds, stick to discipline, and maintain a unidirectional approach.
What not to do: go all-in, fight against the trend, or try to catch both sides at once.
It’s that simple.
**Final Words**
The contract market isn’t a casino, even though many treat it as one. Those who gamble their living expenses for a shot at the future usually end up losing everything. I’ve seen too many cases—some people actually made money, but a single greed-driven mistake wiped it all out.
True wealth isn’t short-term big gains; it’s surviving long enough. As long as you protect your principal and live long enough, you’ll be qualified to talk about "big money" in this space. Time will help you compound your gains.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 01-12 04:16
It sounds like the heartfelt words of seasoned investors, but I feel like this approach is just a disguised way of saying "as long as you're alive"…
Liquidation is indeed common, but I haven't seen anyone around me truly making stable profits, have you?
"Trade less, trade better" sounds nice, but in reality, it just admits that your judgment isn't accurate.
8% monthly, 150% annualized? I feel awkward just saying these numbers.
Two trades a week? Wake up, the market doesn't always follow your schedule.
This point about transaction fees is spot on; many people haven't even calculated this expense.
"Live long enough"—sounds like self-comforting, doesn't it?…
View OriginalReply0
MEVEye
· 01-10 09:49
It's true, living long is the real key.
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Contrarian adding positions is really an art of throwing heads.
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Where are the people who went all-in with 100,000 now?
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The transaction fee part is so real, many people haven't even calculated this.
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I just want to ask, can a stable monthly return of 8% really be achieved? Or is it just another scam to harvest the chives?
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Without leverage, is this even called a contract? Haha.
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Greed really hits home. I've seen too many people close their positions to make money only to go all-in again and lose everything.
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The best quality is in the first two trades every day—this observation is incredible. The rest are just gambling.
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The difficulty in sticking to discipline lies here; everyone wants to hold through and turn the tide.
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Living long enough is indeed the core; if the principal is gone, everything is over.
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You have to be cold-blooded when buying and selling; emotions can't be involved.
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The concept of position sizing sounds like old talk, but very few people can actually implement it.
View OriginalReply0
DAOdreamer
· 01-10 09:43
You're absolutely right, living is more important than making money. Over the past two years, I’ve lost a lot of tuition fees just by stubbornly holding onto positions.
Compared to the tiny profits from leverage, capital safety is the true king.
It sounds simple, but many people give up after just two stop-losses.
Adding positions against the trend is truly a deadly poison; I’ve seen too many people die this way.
Paper profits that don’t get realized are just a joke; I have deep personal experience with this.
I only now understand the importance of not blocking both sides; how much did I lose in fees before?
8% per month, 150% per year? Just listen, only a few can really achieve that.
The worst is those who start to leverage more after tasting some success; their outcomes are rarely good.
I feel this method is about taking it slow, not rushing. In the end, it’s all about mindset.
View OriginalReply0
MevWhisperer
· 01-10 09:43
Bro, I'm tired of hearing this set of arguments, but it really works. The problem is that 99% of people can't do it.
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Honestly, the most ridiculous part is when both ends are blocked, the trading fees eat up the profits, and people still feel good about themselves.
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I skipped the trap of adding positions against the trend; my account was directly wiped out. Now reading this article feels like reading my own blood and tears story.
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A 150% annualized return sounds great, but the discipline required to execute it discourages more than half of the people.
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You're right, living is more important than making money. No matter how much a dead person earns, it's useless.
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I never thought about the concept of position splitting before. I kept going all-in, and as you guessed, you can imagine the result.
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Trading daily until the third time when it starts losing money is an incredible observation. Heartbreaking.
View OriginalReply0
SellTheBounce
· 01-10 09:35
It's the same old "the longer you survive, the more you win" argument... It sounds right, but how many people actually follow through? There are always more people adding to their positions after a decline than those who stick to stop-losses.
After so many years in the industry, I've seen too many people stumble in the contract market. Some blow up their accounts, some disappear entirely. But there are also those who survive, and even live more comfortably than ever. I am one of them. Since I started trading in 2018, those early days of losing money really kept me awake at night. But now I’ve stabilized, and each month brings in a decent profit. Honestly, this isn’t about talent or some secret trick; it’s just a set of ridiculously simple methods—yet because they’re simple, executable, and truly effective, I want to share them.
**Fund Safety Is the First Lesson**
No matter how brilliant your trading logic, a single liquidation can wipe everything out. I’ve seen too many smart people, with top strategies, get wiped out by one decision. So the first iron rule is: to make money, you must first stay alive.
What’s the specific approach? Position sizing is fundamental. When I had a capital of 100,000, I only used 10,000 per trade to test. A full position never exceeds 20% of total funds. It sounds conservative, but it’s this conservatism that has helped me avoid many major market reversals.
Don’t overthink stop-losses either. When a single loss hits 2%, I cut immediately—no "wait and see" thoughts. Many people lose their first big gains because they think, "I can hold on."
Regarding leverage, my advice for beginners is simply: don’t use it. If experienced traders do, keep your position below 10x. Most of the blow-ups I know happened at this point. They felt experienced, started increasing leverage, and then a sudden adverse move wiped them out.
**Trade Less, Focus on Quality**
The logic of making money in the market is actually counterintuitive. Many think earning is about "trading more," but in reality, it’s about "trading correctly." A losing trade needs to be offset by multiple winning trades; it’s hard to keep track of that.
Now I prefer one-way trading. Either only long or only short, no switching back and forth. The benefit? Clear thinking and a significantly higher success rate. Playing both sides, especially with high-frequency trades, eats up most of your profits in fees.
Set your stop-loss and take-profit levels before each trade—say, 3% stop-loss and 5% take-profit. These numbers aren’t random; they’re validated through backtesting. Once set, don’t change them. That’s mechanical discipline. Often, on-the-spot judgments are less reliable than mechanical execution because human emotions can interfere.
Control your trading frequency. I’ve observed that the first one or two trades of the day tend to be the highest quality. After the third, the quality drops, and you’re basically just giving away money. So even if I see an opportunity later, if I’ve already traded twice, I’ll hold back.
**The Common Pitfalls for Beginners**
I want to highlight one specific mistake: adding to a losing position against the trend. Every time you top up your position, you’re actually getting closer to liquidation. It’s a math problem, not a psychological game. If your position is at 20%, and the market moves against you, adding more to reach 30%, and then the market continues to go against you… just imagine what happens next.
Unnecessary trades should also be minimized. Frequent trading costs you in fees, which can surprise you after a year. Some realize that their fees eat up most of their profits—that’s embarrassing.
Most importantly, profits are not real until they are realized. Paper gains are meaningless. Most liquidation cases start with the phrase "It should still go up," and then they’re gone. Now, whenever I hit my target profit, I close the position immediately—no greed.
**How Much Can the Outcome Differ with the Same 10,000 Capital?**
Wrong approach: full 100,000 position, leverage, adding to losing trades, holding on, and finally… liquidation.
Right approach: use 20,000 as a base position, which is relatively safe. Strictly follow 3% stop-loss and 5% take-profit, and only trade twice a week—these two trades should be carefully selected high-quality setups.
What’s the result? Monthly returns can be consistently around 8%. With compound interest, annualized returns can reach over 150%. It sounds aggressive, but it’s based on strict discipline.
**The Six Core Principles**
What to do: trade with idle funds, stick to discipline, and maintain a unidirectional approach.
What not to do: go all-in, fight against the trend, or try to catch both sides at once.
It’s that simple.
**Final Words**
The contract market isn’t a casino, even though many treat it as one. Those who gamble their living expenses for a shot at the future usually end up losing everything. I’ve seen too many cases—some people actually made money, but a single greed-driven mistake wiped it all out.
True wealth isn’t short-term big gains; it’s surviving long enough. As long as you protect your principal and live long enough, you’ll be qualified to talk about "big money" in this space. Time will help you compound your gains.