Last year I brought a friend into the circle. He had zero experience and only about a thousand dollars in capital. As a result, after four months, his account directly increased by more than twenty times, and he's still rolling the snowball now, never experiencing a liquidation during the process.
Many people ask me what my secret is. To be honest, it’s not luck, but a methodology that supports it. I started with small funds myself, learning through trial and error, and the core comes down to three key points—
**First, how to allocate capital.**
Don’t go all-in right away—that’s asking for trouble. I told him to split the money into three parts, each with its own purpose: the first part is for short-term trading, focusing on mainstream coins like BTC or ETH, making just one trade a day, taking 2-5% profit and then withdrawing, never being greedy; the second part is for big opportunities, such as when policy news comes out or key price levels are broken, entering for a 3-5 day swing trade, aiming for stability; the third part? Keep it locked away without touching it, regardless of price fluctuations—that’s your safety fund, to keep you afloat if your mental state collapses.
I’ve seen too many people with just a few thousand dollars go all in—when it goes up, they’re ecstatic; when it falls, they can’t sleep—ultimately, either liquidation or cutting losses and running. Remember: surviving in the crypto world is more important than anything else. Save your bullets; only then can you turn things around.
**Next, when should you take action?**
Most of the crypto market time is spent sideways. Frequently jumping in and out isn’t making money; it’s just paying exchange fees. When the market isn’t moving, doesn’t it feel better to do something else? Wait until the trend is clear—for example, when the price stabilizes above moving averages or volume picks up—then start trading.
Another iron law: lock in profits. As soon as profits exceed 20% of your principal, withdraw 30% immediately. No matter how good your account looks, it’s just numbers—putting it into your pocket is the real deal. True traders understand: don’t trade often; make your move once every three years. Don’t chase small fluctuations; wait for big opportunities.
**Finally, strict rules must be set and adhered to.**
Set a fixed stop-loss at 2% per trade, and cut if hit—no matter if it bounces back later; if profits exceed 4%, take half off the table and set a trailing stop for the rest to let profits run; the harshest rule—never add to a losing position! Over-adding increases panic and emotional trading, which is almost always losing money.
Trading isn’t about who’s the bravest; it’s about who can survive the longest. Stick to your rules, keep your emotions outside, and the money will naturally start to grow over time.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
13 Likes
Reward
13
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
WagmiOrRekt
· 23h ago
This theory sounds smooth, but basically it just means being disciplined. The real issue is that there are very few people who can actually follow through; most just run after losing everything.
View OriginalReply0
PanicSeller
· 12-12 14:13
Damn, isn't this just my friend's story? I thought he was lucky at the time.
View OriginalReply0
PerpetualLonger
· 12-12 13:42
It sounds great, but I just want to ask... if it's really that simple, why are so many people losing money?
View OriginalReply0
BasementAlchemist
· 12-11 22:00
Whoa, a thousand bucks turning twenty times? This guy must have some kind of cheat code. Why don't I have this luck?
View OriginalReply0
TokenTherapist
· 12-11 14:53
Twenty times 1,000, just hearing this number makes it obvious it's survivor bias, haha
View OriginalReply0
SoliditySurvivor
· 12-11 14:52
Nice words, but isn't it just a gambler's mentality disguised as financial management experience? I've seen too many such statements.
View OriginalReply0
ChainBrain
· 12-11 14:48
Wow, a thousand bucks multiplied over twenty times? Is this guy for real, never liquidated his position?
It's a naked survival bias, only talking about winning stories
Dividing funds into three parts is indeed reliable, don't go all-in—that's the truth
Getting emotional just means giving away money, this hits home
But it always seems to be the same tune, only those who have survived until now dare to brag, who cares about those who have died
Last year I brought a friend into the circle. He had zero experience and only about a thousand dollars in capital. As a result, after four months, his account directly increased by more than twenty times, and he's still rolling the snowball now, never experiencing a liquidation during the process.
Many people ask me what my secret is. To be honest, it’s not luck, but a methodology that supports it. I started with small funds myself, learning through trial and error, and the core comes down to three key points—
**First, how to allocate capital.**
Don’t go all-in right away—that’s asking for trouble. I told him to split the money into three parts, each with its own purpose: the first part is for short-term trading, focusing on mainstream coins like BTC or ETH, making just one trade a day, taking 2-5% profit and then withdrawing, never being greedy; the second part is for big opportunities, such as when policy news comes out or key price levels are broken, entering for a 3-5 day swing trade, aiming for stability; the third part? Keep it locked away without touching it, regardless of price fluctuations—that’s your safety fund, to keep you afloat if your mental state collapses.
I’ve seen too many people with just a few thousand dollars go all in—when it goes up, they’re ecstatic; when it falls, they can’t sleep—ultimately, either liquidation or cutting losses and running. Remember: surviving in the crypto world is more important than anything else. Save your bullets; only then can you turn things around.
**Next, when should you take action?**
Most of the crypto market time is spent sideways. Frequently jumping in and out isn’t making money; it’s just paying exchange fees. When the market isn’t moving, doesn’t it feel better to do something else? Wait until the trend is clear—for example, when the price stabilizes above moving averages or volume picks up—then start trading.
Another iron law: lock in profits. As soon as profits exceed 20% of your principal, withdraw 30% immediately. No matter how good your account looks, it’s just numbers—putting it into your pocket is the real deal. True traders understand: don’t trade often; make your move once every three years. Don’t chase small fluctuations; wait for big opportunities.
**Finally, strict rules must be set and adhered to.**
Set a fixed stop-loss at 2% per trade, and cut if hit—no matter if it bounces back later; if profits exceed 4%, take half off the table and set a trailing stop for the rest to let profits run; the harshest rule—never add to a losing position! Over-adding increases panic and emotional trading, which is almost always losing money.
Trading isn’t about who’s the bravest; it’s about who can survive the longest. Stick to your rules, keep your emotions outside, and the money will naturally start to grow over time.