In the cryptocurrency market, what ultimately determines how far a trader can go is never those astonishing single-trade profits, but whether they can survive sustainably.



Many people make the first mistake of treating contracts as a quick way to double their money. Frequent heavy positions, emotional trading, and always going all-in often result in being completely wiped out after just one pullback. Those who truly last in this market rely not on miraculous operations, but on a few verified fundamental understandings.

**Position management is the first line of defense**

Going all-in is the most common fatal mistake for beginners. When the market slightly fluctuates, a seemingly normal pullback can wipe out your account. Treat your position size as a lifeline—the purpose of it is to give yourself repeated opportunities to learn from mistakes. Only by staying at the table can you wait for real opportunities.

**Following the trend always beats counter-trend trading**

Human nature is inherently inclined to buy the dip and fear chasing highs, but in reality, most profitable traders are doing trend-following. During an uptrend, every pullback could be an opportunity to add to your position; as long as the trend isn’t broken, don’t rush to predict reversals. Market continuations happen more frequently than reversals you imagine.

**Risk control and take-profit/take-loss are the moat of your account**

Making money isn’t difficult; the hard part is protecting your profits. Without strict risk management, even the most accurate judgment can turn into losses instantly. Key indicators are simple: keep each loss within 5% of your total capital; the expected profit per trade must be greater than the potential loss; win rate doesn’t have to be high, but the risk-reward ratio and discipline must be stable and sustainable.

**Trade less, wait more**

The biggest problem for beginners isn’t lack of knowledge, but an overly strong desire to operate. Doing dozens of trades a day or hundreds a month often correlates with losses. Trading tests patience, not speed. Make a good plan, execute only a limited number of carefully designed trades each day—this strategy far surpasses random, frequent trading.

In summary: no all-in, follow the trend, control risk, trade less.

In this market, being able to stay steady, wait for the right moment, and survive are seemingly simple principles that are more valuable than any so-called "get-rich-quick secrets." True wealth comes from disciplined and patient compound growth.
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ChainMemeDealervip
· 01-12 15:52
To be honest, over the years I've seen too many people go all-in and get liquidated; indeed, survival is the top priority. However, I still want to try more hands-on experiments, after all, the market changes in an instant. I agree with going with the trend; bottom fishing is really the start of cutting losses. A 5% stop loss sounds simple, but executing it is another matter. Damn, it's that kind of "survive first, then make money" argument, but it doesn't seem to be wrong. Those friends who trade dozens of times a day should definitely take a look at this. Discipline and patience... easy to say, but who can remember that when the market is crazy.
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GasOptimizervip
· 01-12 10:37
That's so true. Most of my friends who went all-in are gone.
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retroactive_airdropvip
· 01-09 22:51
That's so true. The people who went all-in have long been wiped out. I have too many examples around me. --- Following the trend is the way to go. Those trying to bottom fish are all regretful now. --- Risk control is really a moat; without it, everything is pointless. --- Do dozens of trades a day? That's not trading, that's gambling. --- Surviving is winning. It sounds simple, but it's really hard to do. --- Profit and loss ratio > win rate. Very few people understand this. --- Waiting is really a thousand times harder than operating. The hands always want to move. --- Limiting single trade losses to 5%, those who stick to this can survive until the end. --- Not going all-in—these four words—have saved countless accounts.
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MetaMaskVictimvip
· 01-09 22:51
Honestly, I went all-in and went bankrupt. Now I'm just holding onto that little principal, waiting for a rebound.
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GateUser-9ad11037vip
· 01-09 22:50
To be honest, surviving is really more important than getting rich quickly. My three years in the crypto world have been a painful lesson. The group of people who went all-in are long gone; those still around are just scraping by.
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