The friend addition feature in the Binance chat room is here! Brothers with questions! Communicating face-to-face in Binance's official platform is safer and more convenient! Entering the Binance chat room is actually very simple
1. First, save the QR code below 2. Open the Binance homepage and search for the chat room 3. Click the + in the upper right corner 4. Click scan, and upload the QR code you just saved Then you can add me as a friend!
Many people ask me if there are opportunities in the cryptocurrency market with a few thousand U. I always say yes, but the premise is that you want to survive for a long time, not to turn things around overnight.
What misleads people in the crypto market the most are those screenshots of huge profits. It looks like money is being made every day, but in reality, one loss of control could wipe everything out. This is especially true in the contract market, where making money and exiting often come down to a moment of impulse.
I have been in this market for ten years, and my biggest realization is just one sentence: Contracts are not about daring, but about judgment and risk control.
If you want to do this long-term, first learn to preserve your life. Keep leverage low, control it to a low multiple. Calculate single loss in advance, and exit immediately if wrong. Only deal with mainstream coins that have good liquidity, don’t be blinded by the volatility of small coins. Move less during high-risk periods, it’s better to miss out than to force it.
Those who can really stay are not relying on luck, but on not getting liquidated. The first pot of gold is essentially a reward for “surviving.”
In trading, my summarized experiences are quite simple. For strong coins that are adjusting, there’s no need to rush to sell; it’s often an opportunity. After a continuous rise, you should know when to stop; profits are what you have in hand. After a big surge, don’t rush to sell, and don’t rush to chase; wait for the market to move on its own. Real good opportunities often appear after the adjustment ends.
Coins that have been stagnant for too long indicate a lack of interest from funds; it’s time to switch. Only when volume and price are aligned is it worth keeping; If the volume cannot push the price, the quicker you exit, the better.
In the end, only one thing matters: the trend. When the trend is there, opportunities are there; When the trend is gone, no matter how smart you are, it’s useless.
The size of the principal is not the key. The method is right, the rhythm is stable, and execution is in place, Time will naturally stand by your side.
What you lack is not effort; this market is also not lacking opportunities. What you truly lack is someone who can help you achieve stable profits in this market.
When he found me, there was about 1100 in my account. It wasn’t just a trial, it was a loss that made me unaware of the world, tossed around by the market without knowing how to continue.
From a large position to a small fund, wanting to turn over this little position overnight, such people often die at the starting point.
I told him very frankly at that time: what’s most important for you now is not how to earn, but to avoid liquidation.
The pace of operations at the front was very slow, slow enough to be unstimulating. With a small position, I was restrained in my actions, resolutely avoiding markets that should not be touched.
Sometimes a single trade doesn't earn much, but it wins in being controllable; sometimes I simply stay in cash, watching others come and go.
He also had doubts in between, thinking what meaning there was in a profit of dozens of U. I only reminded him: you are currently earning qualifications, not competing for results.
Looking at his account recently, it is already more than that one hundred U. It’s not the kind of explosive wealth, but rather built up step by step. More importantly, he now places orders not relying on emotions, knowing which markets can be traded and which should be waited for.
Many people ask me if small funds can actually make it out. My answer has always been the same: yes, but the premise is that you are willing to walk through this difficult path in front.
After surviving with a small fund, staying alive, only then can the subsequent market be yours to feast on. Those who are eager to turn things around often cannot even maintain their qualifications to enter the market.
I am Uncle Nan, good at medium-short term contracts and medium-long term spot layouts, sharing investment skills daily and detailed strategy teaching points.
In one year, is it difficult to earn 1 million in the cryptocurrency market? It's not easy, but it's not a fantasy. The only prerequisite is two words: discipline.
I have been using a very simple method. No predictions, no directional bets. The core principle is just one: diversification, cycles, and control.
First, divide the funds into five equal parts. If you have 10,000, split it into five parts of 2,000 each. At any time, only move one part.
Choose a cryptocurrency with good liquidity and a stable structure. Buy one part at the current price. Do not chase highs, do not guess lows.
If the price drops by 10%, buy another part. This is not to average down or to salvage, but to execute according to the rules. The lower the price, the more you are just using reserved positions.
When the price rebounds by 10%, sell one part. Do not hesitate, do not take more. What you sell is always profit positions.
Buy, drop, buy again. Rise, meet the target, then sell. Continuously repeat this process.
At this pace, even if the price declines, your cost is being pulled down. When all five positions are used up, you usually have digested a significant portion of the pullback.
From a profit perspective, every time you sell, it’s a solid 10% gain. The funds do not rely on single market movements, but on the fluctuations back and forth.
Of course, this method also has its costs. If the volatility is not enough, transactions slow down. Sometimes funds can get stuck in a certain cryptocurrency.
The solution is not complicated. First, choose mainstream cryptocurrencies with relatively stable volatility. Second, keep idle funds in low-risk investments, allowing time to create value as well.
Whether you can achieve 1 million in a year depends not on the market, but on whether you can follow the rules consistently for a year.
If you don't want to keep spinning in place, then join me in planning, so you can get out of the low point as soon as possible. The current market is a good opportunity for recovery and flipping your positions.
After being in the cryptocurrency circle for a long time, you will gradually realize that the real difference lies not in who knows more indicators, but in who can wait more.
Trading is not a very frequent activity. In a mature trading cycle, most of the time should be spent in cash, observing, and exercising restraint. The time actually spent on operations is very short.
If we must break it down, 70% of the time should be for waiting, 20% for execution, and only 10% for analysis, which is already sufficient.
Many people lose money not because they do not understand the market, but because they cannot stand the blank periods. They get anxious when the market is stagnant, and when their accounts don't move, they feel itchy, leading to frequent entries and exits, turning 'trading' into 'emotional release'. This is essentially not trading, but gambling.
A true trader is more like a lurking hunter. He studies the terrain in advance, knowing where opportunities may arise; He will not shoot recklessly just because the forest is quiet;
He can endure days and weeks of silence, waiting for that moment with the highest probability. Once the target appears, he must act decisively, without hesitation, correction, or excuses.
This is also why significant market movements often reward only a few. It is not that they are smarter, but that while others are frantically moving back and forth, they choose to remain still; when others impulsively rush in, they are already waiting in key positions.
The market does not give away money every day. But as long as you can maintain your patience and wait for the real structural opportunity, a single correct move is often enough to change the account curve, even alter your destiny.
The highest realm of trading has never been about quantity, but accuracy; not speed, but waiting.
A set of correct methods + stable execution is far better than you busying yourself aimlessly! Those who want to turn things around need to catch up quickly.
In the cryptocurrency world, the market always reacts before the news.
Whether it's good news or bad news, by the time you see it on Twitter or from KOLs, the price has usually moved significantly. You think it's an opportunity, but when you enter the market, you're just picking up the pieces.
Many people are used to 'waiting for news'. As soon as good news comes out, they chase it; when bad news arrives, they cut their losses.
As a result, good news often leads to a spike followed by a drop, while bad news can trigger a rebound after an initial decline. You've definitely seen this scenario countless times.
The reason is simple. News isn't prepared for you; it's used by funds to find reasons to act. The truly smart money has already started positioning itself before the news is released; when the news comes out, they only do one thing—cash out.
So what should you learn to observe? Not the headlines, not the announcements, but the price itself. Sudden volume spikes, key levels being tested repeatedly, and unexplained movements in advance—these are the footprints left by capital.
When news is released, it's the most exciting time for retail investors, but it's also the moment of greatest risk.
If a person rushes in recklessly, they will inevitably face losses; if someone guides you, you can walk more steadily. If you really want to change, it’s better to start positioning with me earlier.
A method that even fools can understand, let me take fans to flip the account continuously five or six times!
Looking at K-lines, analyzing potential, and market conditions is not something a novice should do; professional matters should be left to professionals. What you need to do is very simple, just the following points:
The first thing is to learn to hold back. Setting profit and loss limits is not a technical issue, but a human nature issue. The market cannot keep rising indefinitely, nor can it keep falling. You may earn less, but you cannot not exit. Market money is never exhausted, but clearing your account only requires one uncontrolled event.
Second, do not trade frequently. Thinking you can profit from both sides is basically a fantasy. Being able to capture a trend is already beyond most people. Don't overlook transaction fees, especially at high leverage; every time you open a position, your cost is what you lose first.
Third, dare to be in cash. Forcing orders when you don't understand the market is no different from gambling. Missing out can be uncomfortable, but losing is more painful. Being in cash is not a failure; it's a way to protect your capital.
Fourth, the pace should be slow. Don't think about multiplying your money right away. Use small funds and low leverage to gradually build up your winning rate and feel. Being able to consistently earn enough for breakfast is much more reliable than getting rich in one go.
Fifth, absolutely do not go all in with high leverage. The market can be interrupted at any time by a single piece of news. Without stop-losses, high leverage is a suicide button.
Lastly, it is essential to align knowledge with action. This point is indeed quite difficult; even I sometimes cannot fully achieve it. Human weaknesses are hard to grasp, and knowing and doing has never been the same thing.
What truly makes the difference is not how much you know, but whether you can still execute according to the rules when you are emotionally charged.
Follow Uncle Nan; I won't promise you great wealth, but I can help you make steady profits! Hesitation will cause you to miss opportunities, so seize the moment!
From daily liquidation to stable profits, I only changed three habits, taking a whole year to learn.
When I first started trading contracts, I was like most people: chasing after every rise and going short on every fall, my account was like a roller coaster, doubling in a few days, only to drop back to zero in the blink of an eye.
The most memorable time was when I went long on ETH at midnight, watching my unrealized gains soar into the thousands, without setting a take-profit, and then a huge bearish candle hit me hard in the early morning. I was using 75x leverage, and my entire position was liquidated. I sat in front of the computer all night, dazed.
At that time, I finally understood that the market doesn't care about anyone's emotions; the contract market only recognizes logic and execution.
To truly make money, it's not about a stroke of luck but about a reusable set of rules.
I have a few acquaintances who also crawled out from liquidation.
One brother once had less than 300U, and after three weeks of reviewing trades with me, he slowly worked his way back to over 10,000; another friend relied entirely on short-term copying and ended up getting trapped in high-frequency trading, losing seven to eight trades a day. Later, he learned to only take certain opportunities and has now stabilized and made profits.
They didn’t become smarter; they just finally stopped messing around.
As for me, I started from that time, only sticking to three things:
First, all trades must have logic, must have signals; you can't just randomly click orders out of impatience.
Second, regardless of how optimistic I feel, I only use a fixed position size, setting a stop-loss for every trade, and once triggered, I immediately take the loss.
Third, a maximum of two trades per day, no speculation, no adding to positions, no stubborn fighting.
It seems simple, but not many can actually do it. The real change is not in technology, but in habits.
As long as you can get these three things right, you don't need to rely on luck or stare at the charts every day; your account can slowly stabilize.
A set of correct methods + stable execution + a good team to keep the rhythm is far more effective than you busying yourself alone! Those who want to turn things around will find me without having to say a word.
Start with 7800, want to reach hundreds of thousands? There’s only one way to do it.
Many people ask me: With only seven or eight thousand, can I achieve hundreds of thousands in a year? My answer is: Yes, but the premise is that you must follow the contract route.
Spot trading is certainly safe, but using 7800 to buy spot, even if the market gives you a fivefold increase, it’s only about thirty or forty thousand, which is still far from hundreds of thousands. If you want to achieve capital growth in a year, only contracts can amplify leverage.
So how to play? I summarize three points:
First, light positions + stop-loss Don’t fantasize about turning around with one all-in bet. Use a small position to test trends, and if you’re wrong, accept the loss; the market will always have the next opportunity. With seven or eight thousand in capital, it's best not to exceed 500U per trade to ensure continuous opportunities.
Second, roll over profits to increase positions With small capital, it’s impossible to rely on a dead-end salary approach. If you want to amplify returns with contracts, you must roll the profits you earn into the next trade. For example, if you turn 100U into 200U, you can then dare to use 200 for the next bet. This is how you create a snowball effect.
Third, only trade big trends, don’t engage in messy small markets Don’t touch the market when it’s volatile; that’s giving away money. Focus only on the big direction, wait for breakthroughs and trends; you don’t need to trade often, but you must be precise. There may only be a few market waves in a year, but if you seize one or two of them, your capital can grow exponentially.
Many people lose money because they are trading randomly every day and rush in carelessly, ending up blowing their accounts and blaming the market. In fact, the problem lies not with the market, but with the methods and mindset.
Using 7800 to reach hundreds of thousands is not impossible; it's just that this path requires extremely high execution ability. Light positions, stop-loss, rolling profits — these are the principles you must adhere to.
Can it be done in a year? It depends on whether you can control your hands and endure loneliness.
It’s hard to support alone; moving forward alone is not as good as following the big team! The direction of progress has already been indicated, it’s just a matter of whether you can keep up!
Making money is not a temporary thing, it's a lifelong endeavor!
Having been in the cryptocurrency circle for 10 years, to be honest, the experiences from the first few years were truly bloody lessons.
In half a year, I lost 70% of my principal, and I kept thinking about recovering, but my hands just couldn't help but want to open positions.
There is no retail investor who hasn't experienced such lows, especially at that time when there was no experience in controlling positions and mindset.
As time went by, I gradually figured out the rules for survival. While I can't say that I can always win, at least it helps me avoid some common traps and prevent making too many mistakes.
Most retail investors always do the opposite. They stubbornly hold on when they lose, and immediately run when they make a profit. The correct approach should be to do the opposite: dare to let go of the profits, and decisively cut losses when hitting the stop-loss point.
Just this point of "locking in profits at 10% and cutting losses at 5%" can avoid countless deep pits and reduce unnecessary losses.
The market's trading volume is crucial: if the trading volume shrinks when the price hits a new high, there may still be momentum; if it pulls back after breaking the 20-day line and the trading volume shrinks, it could be a buying opportunity.
Don't be greedy; focus your energy on two to three mainstream cryptocurrencies to avoid being overwhelmed by too many coins, which can lead to loss of control over positions.
In day trading: don’t panic during a sharp drop; a rebound will come; be careful during a sharp rise at the close, as it might crash the next day.
A rise on low volume may still go up, but be cautious if the volume is high without a rise; sharp spikes usually lead to corrections.
The most important point is to take a break after making a lot of money to avoid being overly excited; don’t rush when losing, calm down before taking action.
Trading cryptocurrencies relies on endurance and mindset, keeping discipline, the market will reward those who are patient.
True experts never show off their skills, relying on discipline and execution. Follow me, together we will flip accounts, reap profits, and recover. Slow is fast; living longer allows you to laugh until the end.
In the world of cryptocurrencies, it’s both simple and not simple, difficult yet not too difficult. The key is whether you can remain calm when emotions are the most chaotic.
I remember the year LUNA crashed, I was trapped alongside an old mentor. While drinking, he said something that has benefited me ever since: “The market is not that mysterious; as long as you can keep your emotions steady, it will eventually give you money.”
The more I thought about it, the clearer it became— the biggest enemy in the crypto world is not the market, but human nature.
In a bull market, everyone is a prophet; when it drops, everyone becomes a deserter. Most people lose money not because they can’t operate, but because they are led by greed and fear.
I have come from a novice to where I am today, relying entirely on a trading logic that I have tested countless times. It’s not complicated, but it’s useful:
1. Enter the market steadily Don’t rush in just because the coin is rising; the real opportunity is when the market is cold. Familiarize yourself with the rhythm using a small position; it’s a hundred times better than blindly going all in.
2. Endure sideways markets Staying low for a long time often indicates accumulation; staying high for too long usually means a reversal. Low sideways attracts buying, high sideways is for selling; this is the most basic rule of survival.
3. Run during highs, dare to buy during drops Chasing after a high can only mean you’re catching the falling knife; a sharp drop might actually be an opportunity, but you need to consider the structure and support; don’t rush in blindly.
4. Buy on down days, sell on up days This is the hardest to execute because most people always go against it. They panic when they see green and get greedy when they see red.
5. Buy early on drops, sell on midday rises It doesn’t work every time, but in the medium to short term, this rhythm can save you countless times.
Later, I understood that a master is not someone who trades frequently, but someone who makes decisive moves when necessary and remains inactive when it’s time to wait.
You don’t need to think too much when looking at charts; a single candlestick and a volume bar can help you judge direction. These operations are actually the result of experience gained through endurance.
When the market rises, you don’t dare to enter; when it falls, you don’t dare to average down; when you make a profit, you can’t bear to leave; when you’re losing, you don’t dare to cut losses—if these emotions don’t change, you can’t hold onto any profit, no matter how much you make.
A set of correct methods + stable execution is far better than you being busy alone! If you want to turn things around, you better catch up.
Why can’t you ever make money in the crypto world?
Every bull and bear market creates wealth for a group of people. This circle is like that, with strong cycles and high volatility.
I know three people born in the 2000s who made over ten million in the last bull market. Did they work their fingers to the bone? Not really, they just happened to be at the right time.
In reality, a person born in the 2000s, just graduated, with no connections or resources, earning ten million in a few years through working or entrepreneurship is almost impossible. But in the crypto world, even if they don’t end up making money, at least it gives ordinary people a chance to turn their fortunes around.
The logic of making money in the financial market is actually very simple: buy low and sell high.
Speaking of the last market, the bear market bottom was '312', Bitcoin dropped to a low of 3800, Ethereum dropped to a low of 88 dollars, and during the bull market peak, #BTC surged to 69000, #ETH reached 4800, ETH increased by 60 times.
So, for ordinary people, there is no absolute bottom, only 'relatively reasonable areas'.
If BTC and ETH drop more than 70%, you can consider dollar-cost averaging. You don’t have to buy at the lowest point, nor should you expect to sell at the highest point. Those who can do that usually have extraordinary luck.
What really determines whether retail investors make money or not are actually two points: the timing of entry and the cost of holding.
Slowly dollar-cost average in a bear market, and slowly cash out in a bull market. Don’t be too anxious; making money relies on patience, not skills.
Without information advantages and without financial backing, you must maintain a steady mindset and hold your positions. Those who can endure are the winners.
It’s not that you’re not fast enough; it’s that you’re stumbling around alone in the dark. I have always been here, the light is right in front of you. If you don’t keep up, you’ll forever be stuck in the night.
In the crypto world, the real difference is never about who can predict the tops and bottoms. It's about who can understand what the capital is doing and then honestly follow along.
Many people get anxious when prices are stagnant. But when old capital enters the market, it often means increased volume, sideways movement, and a test of patience. Just because prices aren't rising doesn't mean there's no potential; it could very well be quietly accumulating.
What is truly suitable for ordinary people to engage in is not the initial surge, but rather when the trend begins to stabilize and there are buyers during a pullback. That's a signal that the main players are getting ready to act.
The most torturous phase is definitely the washout. Repeated ups and downs, constant false breakouts, specifically designed to exhaust patience. At this point, it's not about technique; it's about whether you can resist the urge to act impulsively.
Unfortunately, most people can't hold on. In a bull market, the real losses often come not from being wrong about direction, but from losing one's composure.
Watching your coins slowly climb while seeing MEME double in a day leads to anxiety, insomnia, portfolio changes, chasing highs, only to find you haven't made any profit at all.
Monitoring the market 24 hours a day, placing orders at the slightest market movement. When extreme volatility hits, you start to hold on until a prompt appears, realizing you've already lost control.
After a bull market runs its course, others' accounts shoot up while you participated the whole time but feel like nothing ever happened.
And the washout often occurs at the most confusing times. Fear is still lingering from the last drop; a slight breeze in the market leads to giving up your chips. By the time you react, the opportunity has already passed.
You don't lack opportunities; what you lack is the courage to take that step. Stop hesitating; follow Uncle Nan's rhythm to turn things around.
After spending a long time in the cryptocurrency world, you'll realize one thing: money earned by luck is likely to be returned in a much uglier way in the end.
What truly sets people apart is not which coin you happened to buy, but whether your way of thinking has upgraded.
Many people only focus on price fluctuations. They get excited when it rises and panic when it falls. But the price itself doesn’t indicate anything, it's just a 'voting result' from everyone in the market using real money.
The truly valuable questions are: Who is buying? Why are they buying? Is it because of technological implementation, ecosystem expansion, or simply driven by emotions? Understanding the direction of funds and consensus is far more important than guessing tops and bottoms.
When I first entered the space, I wanted to grab everything. I chased whichever was rising quickly, afraid of missing out on the so-called myth. In the end, the myth didn’t come to me, but I fell into every pit.
Later, I set a very simple limit for myself. Only do what I can clearly explain the logic of. I understand why it exists, I recognize its source of value, and I can clearly explain how it survives. I won’t touch what I’m not familiar with. I may not catch every opportunity, but at least I can protect my own profits.
Gradually, I no longer see trading as a gamble.
Before each move, I first calculate the worst possible outcome. How much capital can I afford, how big is the expected range, and where must I admit my mistake and exit.
If the calculations are unclear, I simply won’t open a position. When emotions rise, stopping is more important than any action.
After going through several cycles, I finally understand that the market is more like a mirror. It reflects not the market conditions, but your cognition, greed, fear, and patience.
What you lack is not effort; this market is not short on opportunities. What you truly lack is someone who can help you achieve stable profits in this market.
Can ordinary people achieve asset leaps through cryptocurrency trading? The key is not in the market conditions, but in the method of operation.
There are indeed opportunities in the cryptocurrency world, but most losses are not because of misjudging the direction, but rather due to chaotic rhythm and lack of discipline.
When the market is in a sideways phase, the most reasonable choice is to wait and see.
After consolidation, a directional choice often appears. Entering before the trend is clear means taking on uncertainty in advance.
Participating only after the trend has emerged is, in itself, a way to reduce risk.
In short-term trading, popular positions are not suitable for holding onto for too long. Capital movement is the core of short-term market trends; once the excitement decreases, prices often drop quickly. If you react slowly, you can easily get stuck at a high position. Short-term positions need to be continuously switched, not held for the long term.
When prices rise slowly along the trend and volume increases simultaneously, it indicates that the market is entering a pushing phase. In this case, one should reduce frequent operations and focus on the trend.
However, if a large bullish candle with increased volume appears, regardless of its position, one must consider taking profits. Increased volume often means greater divergence and a higher probability of a pullback; exiting early is a protection of existing profits.
Buying and selling should revolve around moving averages, support levels, and resistance levels. If a judgment is wrong, timely adjustments should be made, and stop-loss measures should be executed for operational mistakes.
Short-term trading emphasizes execution, not prediction. The holding period should be controlled within a few days; exceeding this time is no longer in line with short-term logic, and subsequent trends should not be participated in.
In the cryptocurrency world, there are some basic principles that need to be repeatedly executed: do not chase after rises, do not catch falling prices, and do not act in a sideways market. Many losses do not come from one-sided markets, but from frequent actions.
Before each purchase, one must clarify the reasons for buying, the operational plan, the response plan for declines, and the handling methods after being stuck.
Funds should be used in batches to avoid a one-time investment. As long as each transaction is planned and responsive, over the long term, the results depend more on discipline than on luck.
I am Uncle Nan, using the pitfalls I've encountered to help you avoid detours.
Many people ask me, as someone who has been in the cryptocurrency space for a long time, whether I can return to a normal life.
I am 34 years old this year, and I entered the space at 24, a full ten years. The real turning point was in the past two years when my account first reached a new level, and my material conditions suddenly eased, but my mind became more restless.
To be honest, the feedback from the cryptocurrency space is too direct. No need for socializing, no need for networking, no need to deal with complex personal relationships; you can determine your emotions for the day just by looking at the market.
Over time, people become increasingly closed off, and the radius of life is reduced to just price fluctuations.
Later, I gradually realized that whether trading cryptocurrencies can go far is not as related to technology as one might think; the core is still the mindset.
Many people think it relies on judgment, but it actually relies on going with the trend. Bitcoin is always the axis of the market; if the main market is not stable, it is difficult for other coins to strengthen independently.
Funds switching back and forth between Bitcoin and stablecoins reveal changes in risk appetite; if you can understand this, you can avoid many pitfalls.
The timing of market rhythms is equally important. The time differences in capital entering and exiting different markets often determine which hours the volatility concentrates in.
Many trends do not appear randomly but are the result of capital rotation. Understanding these patterns is more valuable than frequent trading.
I am no longer obsessed with every fluctuation; as long as the target is not purely conceptual and has trading volume, a pullback itself is not scary.
If I have extra money, I will adjust my costs in batches; if not, I will extend the cycle and wait for recovery. What truly determines profit and loss is not whether you hit the lowest point but whether you can endure the most uncomfortable stage.
Returning to normal life is not about leaving the market, but about not being led by the market anymore. With regular routines, lighter positions, and stable emotions, people naturally come back.
In the end, what matters in cryptocurrency trading is not who makes money quickly but who can stay in the market the longest. Patience is the reason why a few can persist until the end.
The market is still brewing; follow Uncle Nan to accurately grasp the market and seize the opportunity to layout the next great deal together with me!
But how much can be earned, and whether it can be held onto, completely depends on the individual.
I have many fans who trade contracts; some have slowly turned 1000U into tens of thousands of U, while others have pushed 5000U to nearly 100,000U, only to end up with a total loss after one liquidation.
Many people don’t understand. Clearly, they’ve already made so much, why not stop?
The reason is actually very simple. After making money, desires are magnified. After losing, there’s a rush to recover. Human nature is caught in a tug-of-war between these two emotions.
What truly leads to losses is often not the market conditions. But rather three old problems.
First, insufficient understanding. Not being able to comprehend the project, not understanding the structure, and entering based solely on feelings. Easily led by news and easily falling into traps.
Second, loss of control over one’s mindset. Lacking patience and resolve. Wanting to act as soon as the market moves, resulting in increasingly chaotic positions. Clearly should exit, yet clinging to luck and refusing to admit mistakes.
Third, inadequate technical skills. Frequent mistakes in trend judgment. After losses, reducing positions, which makes recovery even more difficult. Accounts gradually being drained, caught in a death spiral.
In contract trading, strategy is important, but mindset is even more important. When losing, can you calmly review your trades? When profitable, can you maintain clarity? These two points are harder than any skill.
Contracts are not untouchable. But they are more like a magnifying glass. Magnifying your discipline and also magnifying your weaknesses. Whether you can go far ultimately depends on yourself.
There are opportunities in the crypto world, but there are more traps. Very few can truly make money; follow Uncle Nan to help you turn things around and recover in this market!
Understanding the rhythm is more important than predicting price points.
When the price rises rapidly and then falls slowly, it often indicates that selling pressure is not heavy. A rapid rise signifies capital entering the market, while a slow decline indicates that shares are being absorbed. This structure usually does not mean the end of a trend, but rather is preparing for the next move.
If the trend is the opposite, vigilance must be heightened. A rapid price drop followed by a sluggish rebound indicates insufficient buying interest. When funds exit, it is often decisive, but replenishing lacks sustainability. In such market conditions, risks usually outweigh opportunities.
Trading volume is an important clue for judging strength and weakness. High volume at elevated levels does not necessarily mean an immediate peak. However, once the price stagnates and volume begins to shrink, the momentum for upward movement will noticeably weaken. At this stage, protecting profits is more important than chasing space.
High volume at low levels should not lead to hasty conclusions. The first surge in volume may just be emotional release. Only when volume continues to increase and the price structure gradually rises does it indicate that capital has truly begun to enter. Patience in waiting for confirmation is safer than jumping the gun.
Ultimately, trading in the cryptocurrency market is not about technical tricks. Rather, it is about understanding emotions and consensus. Emotions dictate short-term fluctuations, and trading volume reflects capital attitudes. When the majority reaches a consensus, prices will move further.
Trading, at its core, is about dealing with human nature. Understanding panic and greed. Follow the consensus and stay away from emotional trading. Achieving this puts you ahead of most people.
You do not lack opportunities; what you lack is the courage to take that step. Do not hesitate any longer; follow Uncle Nan and get in the rhythm of turning things around.
Many people have never truly experienced a significant loss. It's not a small pullback; it's the feeling of numbers evaporating overnight, leaving one feeling empty inside. I've experienced it and I've seen it. So I know very well that a true turnaround is never about luck.
Those who can really climb out often have only a small amount of capital left. It's not that they're not afraid; it's that they have no choice left. At this point, it's not about judgment, but about restraint.
I've seen people stand up again with very little capital. They only engage in extreme volatility. They don't chase trends, nor do they talk about beliefs. After the market pulls sharply, they wait for prices to return to key moving averages. They enter lightly, and they make quick trades. They take profits on a single trade and do not exceed two trades in a day.
There are also those who focus on moments of chaotic liquidity. New targets, deep and thin, and emotional chaos. They calculate prices in advance and place orders to wait for execution. It's not about betting on direction; it's about exploiting imbalances.
The hardest step is actually the one that comes later. Once the account doubles, take half of it out first. Do not leave it on the market, do not give yourself a chance to regret. Many people start to lose control after a series of wins.
Those who can truly turn the tables are never the ones with the biggest guts. But rather, those who are willing to stop when making money.
Wanting to turn your capital is not something that can be done just by browsing in the square; if you really want to change, it’s better to plan with me early on.
Many friends ask me the same two questions: With so many coins, how do I choose? When to enter and exit to avoid pitfalls?
My answer has always been the same: Don't make it too complicated; doing well in rhythm, judgment, and discipline is more important than studying a bunch of indicators.
Over the years of trial and error, I have summarized a practical logic. It can't be called profound, but it excels in stability.
First, focus only on the coins that have movement. I check the recent price increases and trading volumes every day. Only those with active prices and increased trading volumes indicate that there is capital attention. Projects that have not fluctuated or gained popularity for a long time should be avoided, even if they are cheap, as they can easily be buried.
Second, determine the direction using a large cycle. Short-term fluctuations have too much noise and can easily mislead people. I pay more attention to the monthly trend; I only consider participating when the MACD shows a strengthening signal. If the direction is correct, the difficulty of operation is directly reduced by half.
Next, look for opportunities near key moving averages. After confirming the trend, watch for daily line pullbacks. When the price approaches the 60-day moving average and shows stabilization with increased volume, it is a relatively ideal position. Do not rush or chase; just wait for the points you understand.
After entering the market, first think about how to exit. As long as it breaks important support, I will exit without hesitation. The market won't give you another chance just because you are reluctant. Surviving is more important than anything else.
Profits must be processed in batches. When it rises to a certain extent, I will gradually reduce my position and secure the profits. Leave a portion to follow the trend; this will ease your mindset and make it less likely to operate chaotically.
The last point, and the most important: execution. No matter how good the method is, not sticking to it is useless. In the cryptocurrency circle, it's not about who is smarter, but about who is more stable.
These rules are experiences gained from repeated pitfalls. Follow the trend, maintain the baseline, accumulate slowly, and the results will naturally not be too bad.
One tree cannot support a forest; advancing alone is not as good as following a large group! The direction has already been indicated; it depends on whether you can keep up!