Eight years ago, you entered with $1,200. How did you grow your account to $36 million? It sounds unbelievable, but the methodology is actually quite simple—strict position management combined with disciplined execution.
**Capital Segmentation is Fundamental**
Divide the principal into five parts, trading only one-tenth of the total each time. Set a hard stop-loss at 10 points, keeping single-loss within 2% of total funds. Even five consecutive mistakes only result in a 10% loss—this design keeps risk always manageable. What about taking profits? Don’t be greedy; consider exiting once gains exceed 10 points. The beauty of this logic is that the cost of mistakes is very low, but the compound effect of correct trades can accumulate.
**Trend Judgment is Key**
Rebounds during a downtrend are often traps for the trapped; pullbacks during an uptrend are the real opportunities. Avoid trading coins that surge short-term—whether mainstream or small-cap—high-level stagnation will inevitably fall back, and there are no exceptions to this logic. How to use the MACD indicator? When DIF and DEA cross above the zero line and break through zero, enter the market; when they cross below the zero line, reduce your position.
**Practical Application of Moving Averages**
A 3-day moving average turning upward indicates short-term opportunity; a 30-day moving average turning upward suggests medium-term bullishness; an 84-day moving average turning upward signals a brewing main rally; a 120-day moving average trending upward confirms a long-term trend. Combining different periods helps filter out much noise.
**Volume and Price Relationship Cannot Be Ignored**
Pay close attention when volume surges during low consolidation—this is a signal of potential initiation. But if volume surges at high levels and the price doesn’t move, it’s time to exit. Don’t hold onto false hopes.
**Two Principles That Must Be Followed**
Never add to a losing position—doubling down only deepens the trap, which is a common mistake among retail investors. Conversely, making profits gives you the confidence to increase your position. Review every trade: does the logic still hold? Is the weekly trend correct? Has the trend reversed? Strategies must be flexible and adaptable; stubbornness is a mistake.
These methods are nothing mysterious—they are about quantifying risk, standardizing trading, and shielding emotions. Execute diligently, and the opportunity to turn things around is right there.
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MEVHunterZhang
· 01-06 00:43
Wow, 12 million to 36 million? The multiplier is so outrageous that I find it hard to believe, but upon closer inspection, the logic really checks out.
This method of dividing funds is essentially putting a shackle on yourself. You only move one-tenth each time, which most people simply can't stick to. It’s psychologically tough.
The key is still that saying—don't buy more when losing, buy more when making money. It sounds simple, but actually doing it can drive people crazy.
I'm just curious—why do so many people always want to buy the dip during a rebound? Do they have to get caught once to learn their lesson?
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ResearchChadButBroke
· 01-05 23:24
Alright, this set of logic sounds comfortable, but how many can truly survive and benefit from compound interest? The key is self-discipline. Most people can't resist when they see a MACD golden cross...
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TokenomicsTrapper
· 01-03 14:54
lmao, 1200 to 36M and it's just "discipline"? actually if you read the contract on their trading history... called this months ago, textbook survivorship bias energy
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SelfRugger
· 01-03 14:53
It's the same old story of stop-loss and take-profit strategies; I've heard it a hundred times. But indeed, some people turn their fortunes around with this approach. I just don't have the patience for it...
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Rugman_Walking
· 01-03 14:53
$1200 to $36 million, this number sounds really outrageous, but upon closer inspection, the methodology is indeed just a few sets... The key is whether you can stick with it, right?
It's correct that not adding to losing positions is important; this is the biggest common mistake among retail investors—adding more deepens the loss. But the truth is, most people simply can't stick to disciplined execution.
I've tried the 84-day moving average, and it does filter out a lot of noise, but it requires patience to wait for signals.
Honestly, it's still a mindset issue. Technical analysis and strategies are not difficult; what's hard is remaining rational and not adding to positions when the account drops 20%.
The logic behind the compound interest effect is sound—small errors have high tolerance, and the ball rolls bigger slowly... if you can endure the first three years.
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GateUser-26d7f434
· 01-03 14:40
36 million sounds pretty outrageous, but to be honest, this 2% single-transaction risk control system can really last a long time... mainly because it’s hard to stick with it.
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GasWaster
· 01-03 14:36
Whoa, $1,200 to 36 million? This number sounds like a fairy tale, but after looking at the methodology, there's really not much trickery involved.
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Layer2Arbitrageur
· 01-03 14:30
lmao the 2% risk per trade is literally just kelly criterion with training wheels. everyone talks about it but actually sticking to it? that's where 99% fail. the math checks out tho ngl
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LuckyHashValue
· 01-03 14:26
Haha, I've heard this trick many times before, but the key is still to survive.
Eight years ago, you entered with $1,200. How did you grow your account to $36 million? It sounds unbelievable, but the methodology is actually quite simple—strict position management combined with disciplined execution.
**Capital Segmentation is Fundamental**
Divide the principal into five parts, trading only one-tenth of the total each time. Set a hard stop-loss at 10 points, keeping single-loss within 2% of total funds. Even five consecutive mistakes only result in a 10% loss—this design keeps risk always manageable. What about taking profits? Don’t be greedy; consider exiting once gains exceed 10 points. The beauty of this logic is that the cost of mistakes is very low, but the compound effect of correct trades can accumulate.
**Trend Judgment is Key**
Rebounds during a downtrend are often traps for the trapped; pullbacks during an uptrend are the real opportunities. Avoid trading coins that surge short-term—whether mainstream or small-cap—high-level stagnation will inevitably fall back, and there are no exceptions to this logic. How to use the MACD indicator? When DIF and DEA cross above the zero line and break through zero, enter the market; when they cross below the zero line, reduce your position.
**Practical Application of Moving Averages**
A 3-day moving average turning upward indicates short-term opportunity; a 30-day moving average turning upward suggests medium-term bullishness; an 84-day moving average turning upward signals a brewing main rally; a 120-day moving average trending upward confirms a long-term trend. Combining different periods helps filter out much noise.
**Volume and Price Relationship Cannot Be Ignored**
Pay close attention when volume surges during low consolidation—this is a signal of potential initiation. But if volume surges at high levels and the price doesn’t move, it’s time to exit. Don’t hold onto false hopes.
**Two Principles That Must Be Followed**
Never add to a losing position—doubling down only deepens the trap, which is a common mistake among retail investors. Conversely, making profits gives you the confidence to increase your position. Review every trade: does the logic still hold? Is the weekly trend correct? Has the trend reversed? Strategies must be flexible and adaptable; stubbornness is a mistake.
These methods are nothing mysterious—they are about quantifying risk, standardizing trading, and shielding emotions. Execute diligently, and the opportunity to turn things around is right there.