#加密生态动态追踪 Remember the 2017 market cycle, my friend Lao Zhou was really in a frenzy.
At that time, Cardano had just been listed for a short while, with $ADA hovering around $0.028. He kept staring at the technical indicators, deciding to buy in batches. Who would have thought this coin would hit the bull market’s wave exactly, surging to $1.1 in just three months. Lao Zhou’s account saw unrealized profits multiply nearly 40 times. When he told me, his eyes were shining — behind the numbers on his phone screen were all zeros, and he even collected floor plans of school district houses.
Greed is the most tormenting thing.
I advised him to sell some of his holdings in batches to lock in gains, but he kept pondering the unfilled orders, saying “the trend isn’t broken yet.” Then, the turn came suddenly — ADA suddenly entered a downtrend, dropping back to $0.2 in less than a month. The unrealized gains evaporated by over 80%, and the dream of buying a house just vanished into thin air.
This taught me a profound lesson. The real survival rule in the crypto world isn’t just about knowing when to buy, but also about knowing when to sell. Now, with $ADA at $0.41, even if the market fluctuates wildly, I can stay calm — all thanks to the experience gained from this loss.
Later, I developed a three-tier take-profit strategy. For example, for coins bought at $1, when they reach $2, sell 30% to recover the cost; then at $3, sell another 30%; finally, the remaining 40% is set with a 15% trailing stop to let profits run.
On the stop-loss side, it’s even more straightforward — the maximum loss per trade is 5% of the total account balance, and immediately set a -10% stop-loss order after opening the position.
Over the years, I’ve seen too many wealth myths and liquidation tragedies. The crypto space isn’t short of market opportunities; what’s missing is the principal to survive until the next round.
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ProfitableIncome
· 13h ago
Silly Dog tells the same story every day, is it interesting?
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MayTheYearsBeGentle
· 20h ago
I'm not quite sure about the loss part either. The single-loss limit is 5% of the total account funds. After opening a position, immediately place a stop-loss order at -10%. Does that mean, after buying, you immediately place a sell order at -10%? What if it happens to drop to -10% and then rises again?
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MayTheYearsBeGentle
· 20h ago
May I ask: what does it mean to set a 15% trailing stop-loss on 40% of the position?
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SelfMadeRuggee
· 20h ago
Old Zhou's story is indeed a classic, but to be honest, what I fear more now is the regret of not getting on board from the very beginning.
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ApeWithAPlan
· 20h ago
Old Zhou's move was truly a textbook "greedy killer." Not holding onto a 40x profit is really heartbreaking. That's why I now tend to sell half when I see a doubling trend.
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GateUser-3824aa38
· 21h ago
Old Zhou's greed in this wave is truly textbook level; he couldn't hold onto a 40x unrealized profit. I just don't believe he hasn't thought about it countless times in the middle of the night and couldn't sleep.
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MiningDisasterSurvivor
· 21h ago
Old Zhou's approach is a typical case of "the richer the account, the more likely to have problems." A 40x floating profit and still not taken out, and still researching open interest—this mind is truly consumed by greed. I've been through it myself; before the mining disaster in 2018, I was also messing around like this. Looking back now, more people are willing to buy; only those who sell are truly alive.
#加密生态动态追踪 Remember the 2017 market cycle, my friend Lao Zhou was really in a frenzy.
At that time, Cardano had just been listed for a short while, with $ADA hovering around $0.028. He kept staring at the technical indicators, deciding to buy in batches. Who would have thought this coin would hit the bull market’s wave exactly, surging to $1.1 in just three months. Lao Zhou’s account saw unrealized profits multiply nearly 40 times. When he told me, his eyes were shining — behind the numbers on his phone screen were all zeros, and he even collected floor plans of school district houses.
Greed is the most tormenting thing.
I advised him to sell some of his holdings in batches to lock in gains, but he kept pondering the unfilled orders, saying “the trend isn’t broken yet.” Then, the turn came suddenly — ADA suddenly entered a downtrend, dropping back to $0.2 in less than a month. The unrealized gains evaporated by over 80%, and the dream of buying a house just vanished into thin air.
This taught me a profound lesson. The real survival rule in the crypto world isn’t just about knowing when to buy, but also about knowing when to sell. Now, with $ADA at $0.41, even if the market fluctuates wildly, I can stay calm — all thanks to the experience gained from this loss.
Later, I developed a three-tier take-profit strategy. For example, for coins bought at $1, when they reach $2, sell 30% to recover the cost; then at $3, sell another 30%; finally, the remaining 40% is set with a 15% trailing stop to let profits run.
On the stop-loss side, it’s even more straightforward — the maximum loss per trade is 5% of the total account balance, and immediately set a -10% stop-loss order after opening the position.
Over the years, I’ve seen too many wealth myths and liquidation tragedies. The crypto space isn’t short of market opportunities; what’s missing is the principal to survive until the next round.